Tag Archives: Volume HAF19

The Second Coming Of The Lord Our Hope

Our Lord's second coming is the bright morning star of the believer's life.

It is the goal which the racer ever keeps in view (Phil. 3:14-21).

It is as the distant shore for the sea-tossed and weary mariner, becoming more and more distinct as he uses his glass and keeps a watch.

It is as the going home for the soldier in the distant country, as he emerges from the battle-field :the battles have been fought, the trials have been many; but peace has been proclaimed, and the music strikes the notes of "Home, sweet home."

It is as the morning star for the faithful watcher who has stood by his post during the various stages of the long, dark night,-the harbinger of the day-dawn.

It is rest, the ideal rest for the afflicted and weary saint, who has, under the government of God, patiently waited the change, to see Him face to face.

It will be the great and grand reunion of the many saints that death had for long separated-fathers, mothers, sons, daughters, friends, companions, which death had parted; but at our Lord's coming all who have passed away, "died in faith," will join the living, who shall be changed, and be forever with the Lord" (i Thess. 4:13-18). And what a joy this will be,-first for Him, and next for the saints ! It will be the day of His espousals and the gladness of His heart (Songs 3:11). Then the Bride, the Church, shall be presented without spot, coming up from the wilderness leaning upon the arm of her Beloved.

The racer will reach his goal; the mariner step on the distant shore; the soldier, the watcher, each and all will have their long cherished hopes realized.

The full blessedness of the love of God each shall know. The grace and redemption by the blood of the Lamb each shall share with exultation; and worship and praise will rise from all the redeemed, to God and to Christ forever. A. E. B.

  Author: Albert E. Booth         Publication: Volume HAF19

A Few Thoughts On I John 2:1:

The opening verses of this second chapter of John's epistle are very beautiful, and it may not be amiss to spend a few moments in meditation thereon. The most wonderful glories of God's ways seem focused on the darkest pages of those of man and where clouds gather blackest we may look for the brightest sunshine. These verses form no exception to this rule. We may say that there is nothing more awful than sin in the believer and that there is nothing more beautiful than the grace which meets it. Where knowledge is greatest, responsibility is deepest.

That this is true needs no proof. It is an axiom, it is self-evident. "If I had not come unto them" said our Lord, "they had not had sin but now they have no cloak for their sin." " He that committeth sin hath not seen Him neither known Him," exclaims he who leaned on Jesus' bosom, while of Capernaum exalted to heaven, because of Christ's presence, it is said that it shall be cast down to hell. Knowledge intensifies guilt. The very laws of human jurisprudence proclaim it and avow it, and it is so true that which is not sin to one is to another. "To him that knoweth to do good and doeth it not to him it is sin."

Let us look then at some of the thoughts connected with sin in Scripture and may they serve as sign posts to warn us off from treacherous and forbidden ground and stand as warrants to condemn us should we venture thereon. Trench tells us that there are about nine words in the Greek of Scripture which are connected with it, or translated into it. While, no doubt, the knowledge of sin existed in all races and had some equivalent in all languages, yet God's revelation has added to its knowledge and accumulated around it a wider vocabulary, giving birth to a more comprehensive conception, and the analysis of that conception should be helpful.

Each of these words which we shall look at has an original and root-meaning, and while that root-meaning is by no means the equivalent of its present sense, yet each little root thought serves to build up our complete idea thereof. " Amartia" is the first of these, and involves the idea of missing a mark, failing of an ideal. He that sins then, misses the mark that has been set by God for him. Shall we say it is a miscalculation? Indeed it is and a most shameful and sorrowful one, a most wretched failure! It has darkened the whole creation by its folly. It is an awful blunder. But it is not merely that-a blunder, a miscalculation, a careless mistake-it is disobedience, parakoe, a "hearing amiss." It is that disobedience which results not so much from defiance as from a careless indifference as to the Master's word, a "Yea, hath God said?" and that sort of thing. How intensely sad to think that the believer's sin has that in it. "Yea and hath Christ said"? " My sheep hear My voice and they follow Me," said the Lord; but alas, he who sins is indifferent to it.

But indifference in anyone, and so much the more if it be in Christ's own, cannot be merely that, it is also parabasis, "transgression." Perhaps especially true where a direct command is violated, yet all sin has this in it. If God's commandment is not trampled on, yet the voice of conscience is. It is breaking down God's landmarks, and entering into the devil's territory. And this transgression has in it the germs of that which leads to throwing off all law and government and becoming "lawlessness," "anomia all "sin is lawlessness." It is a throwing off of the laws of the Creator and the introduction of spiritual anarchy which knows not law. No wonder then that here everything gets out of tune. Sin is plemmeeleia,'' discord." What sad discord! the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain because of it. And oh may we not say as we look at its awful consequences that is agnoema, "ignorance?" Ignorance, folly, self-indulged, self-induced and needlessly reveled in.

"My little children, these things write I unto you that ye sin not. And if any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the Righteous." John wishes to keep sin from his little children but he knows that there is, alas! a possibility of it. Had he not seen it break out on the lips of one of the best of men on the dark night of Christ's betrayal? It is possible for us to sin. It is possible for us to curse and swear, to deny Christ and break the blessed communion which should be ours with Him. It is possible for us to do all these things and "more. Do we know it? Men say that, "Forewarned is forearmed." We are forewarned; Peter was forewarned, but are we forearmed? John gives us the armor in the first chapter, but it needs to be put on. The first chapter may be briefly epitomized as "the glory of Christ as God and Man and His glorious environment." What could be more sanctifying? It is of Him that John says that a man committing sin hath not seen Him neither known Him. What a blessed safeguard!

" In all extremes Lord Thou art still.
The mount whereto my hopes do flee;
O make my soul detest all 99:
Because so much abhorred by Thee."

To become more like Him we need to hate sin more, and to delight in gazing on Him more; and . each mutually helps to bring about the other. Among all the vast multitudes who hold in their hands this awful power, Christ is the only One upon whom we may direct our gaze and be absolutely sure that there we shall find nothing sinful. No wonder John opens his epistle with those beautiful words, "That which was from the beginning, which we have seen with our eyes which we have heard, which we have gazed on and our hands have handled of the Word of life." "These things," this Christ, this God, this Man, this One in whom is light and who dwelleth forever in the light, this Jesus, shall be our Sanctifier and Saviour from sin and all its power.

"He forgives sin and breaks its power; He sets the captive free."

Reader has He done it for you?

As we were saying before, John knows too well how possible it is to sin; and for such he says, "there is an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the Righteous." I would call your attention for a little to the word "advocate" paracletos. It is very interesting to notice that it is found in the New Testament in John's writings only; while its abstract form paraklesis, translated "consolation," "comfort," and occurring many times elsewhere is never once used by this same apostle. If we look at this as a mere chance phenomenon, it is a curious one, whereas if we perceive in it something more, we have a beautiful thought. We have so identified the sun in our every day experience with the light which it so bountifully sheds upon us, that to speak of one is to think of the other; and with John to think of "consolation" is to think of the "Consoler," yea is to forget all about the consolation (paraklesis) in the blessed Person who brings it (the Parakletos). Reader when you think of comfort, do you always think of Christ?

The word "advocate" has been variously rendered by different translators. In John's Gospel the same word is rendered "Comforter;" " I will send you another Comforter . . . even the Spirit of truth." We have then two advocates or comforters. The One tells us about God and the Other speaks to God about us. Here then speaking reverently, we have Divine Arms linking us with the Father and the Father with us; a blessed Voice of mercy which in our estrangement from Christ, whispers in the Father's ear of our blood-bought righteousness, and the earnest pleading of the Spirit-advocate, of the excellences of our Advocate above.

"We have an Advocate with the Father." When? "If any man sin." I believe and am sure that pleading begins as soon as the sinful act is commenced, but that is not just what John says. He says, " If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father." John brings us into the family of God. If any man in the family sin, the family has an Advocate, to whom they can appeal in behalf of the transgressor. The whole family is stirred into supplication for its erring member and many an earnest entreaty arises to the blessed Advocate above who on His part with His whole heart full of willingness, anticipates their plea. The Advocate pleads "guilty" in behalf of His client and puts in plea, a blood bought pardon. This is a righteous plea advanced by a righteous Person, Jesus-Christ the Righteous.

O child of God, disgraced by sin, with your beautiful garments soiled and mud-stained, our righteous Advocate will not belittle your guilt, will not slur over your transgression. You shall be judged in the full light, every flaw shall -be judged and . . . not condemned! F. C. G.

  Author: F. C. G.         Publication: Volume HAF19

Fragment

The fisherman does not spend the whole of his time in fishing, though about fishing; he uses many hours in mending his nets. And those who fish for souls need prepare for their work by reading and prayer. H. F. W.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

Obedience To God

UNDER WORLD – GOVERNMENTS.*

*Extract from Notes on Daniel, by W. K. – the Treasury of Truth, No. 24.*

Indeed Nebuchadnezzar was a man as wise I according to the flesh as he was wilful. He stood in a place that no man had occupied before; not only the sovereign of a vast kingdom, but the absolute master of many kingdoms, speaking different tongues, and having all sorts of contrary habits and policies. What then was to be done with them ? How were all these various nations to be kept and governed under a single head ? There is an influence that is mightier than any other thing, which, if common, binds men closely together; but which on the contrary, if jarring, more than anything else arrays people against people, house against house, children against parents, and parents against children, nay, husbands and wives against each other. There is no social dislocation to be compared with that which is produced by a difference of religion. Consequently, to avert so great a peril, union in religion was the measure that the devil insinuated into the mind of the politic Chaldean as the surest bond of his empire. He must have one common religious influence in order to weld together the hearts of his subjects. In all probability, to his mind it was a political necessity. Unite them in worship, unite all hearts in bowing down before one and the same object, and there would be something to furnish the hope and opportunity of consolidating all these scattered fragments into a whole. Accordingly, the king projects the idea of the gorgeous image of gold for the plain of Dura, near the capital of the empire:and there it is that he summons all the leading men, the princes, the governors, and the captains, the judges, the treasurers, the counselors, the sheriffs, and all the rulers of the provinces, all in power and authority, to come together to the dedication. The authority, therefore, of the empire was put forth, and all were commanded to worship the golden image on pain of death. "Whoso falleth not down and worshipeth, shall the same hour be cast into the midst of a burning fiery furnace."

"Therefore, at that time, when all the people heard the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, and all kinds of music, all the people, the nations, and the languages, fell down and worshiped the golden image that Nebuchadnezzar the king had set up" (ver. 7).

But there were some apart from that idolatrous throng; very few alas ! though, no doubt, there were others hidden. We may be bold enough to say there was one not mentioned here-Daniel himself. However this be, his three companions were not there; and this made them obnoxious to others; especially as their position, exalted as it was in the province of Babylon, exposed them to more public notice. Of course they were singled out for the king's displeasure. "Wherefore at that time certain Chaldeans came near and accused the Jews." Then they remind the king of the decree that he had made, and add, "There are certain Jews, whom thou hast set over the affairs of the province of Babylon, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego; these men, O king, have not regarded thee; they serve not thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up. Then Nebuchadnezzar, in his rage and fury, commanded to bring Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego," etc.

But the evil of man and the craft of Satan only serve to bring the faithful into view. The king commands them to be cast into the burning fiery furnace. No doubt, he first remonstrates, and gives them the opportunity of yielding. "Is it true, O Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, do not ye serve my gods, nor worship the golden image which I have set up ? Now, if ye be ready, that at what time ye hear the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, etc., … ye fall down and worship the image that I have made, well:but if ye worship not, ye shall be cast the same hour into the midst of a burning fiery furnace; and who is that God that shall deliver you out of my hands ?" It is solemn to see how evanescent was the impression made upon the king's mind. The last act recorded before this image was set up was his falling down on his face before Daniel, paying him all but divine honors. He had even said, "Of a truth it is that your God is a God of gods and a Lord of kings, and a revealer of secrets, seeing thou couldst reveal this secret." But it was another thing, when he finds out his power disputed, and his image despised, spite of the burning fiery furnace.

It was all very well to acknowledge God for a moment when He was revealing a secret to him. That was plainly decided in chap. 2:And Daniel there represents those who have the mind of God and who are found in the place of fearing God. "The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him."

But God had delegated power to the head of the Gentiles, Nebuchadnezzar. And now that these men had dared to brave the consequences rather than worship the image, he is filled with fury, which vents itself in scorn of God Himself. "Who is that God," he says, " that shall deliver you out of my hands ?" The consequence was that it became now a question between him whom God had set up and God Himself.

But a most beautiful and blessed feature comes out here. It is not God's way, at the present, to meet power by power. It is not His way to deal with the Gentiles in destruction, even where they may be abusing power against the God who has set them in authority; and I call your attention to this, believing it to be an important thing practically. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego do not in any way take the ground of resisting Nebuchadnezzar in his wickedness. We know afterwards that his conduct was so evil that God stripped him of all glory, and even of intelligence as a man, for a long time. But still these godly men do not pretend that he is a false king because he sets up and enforces idolatry. For the Christian, the question is not about the king, but how he ought to behave himself. It is not his business to meddle with others. He is called to walk, relying on God, in obedience and patience. As to the great mass of every day obligations we can obey God in obeying the laws of the land in which we live. This might be the case in any country. If one were even in a popish kingdom, I believe that, in the main, one might obey God without transgressing the laws of the land. It might be necessary, sometimes, to hide oneself. If they were coming, for instance, with their processions, and required a mark of respect to the host, one ought to avoid the appearance of insulting their feelings, while, on the other hand, one could not acquiesce in their false worship.

But it is extremely important to remember that government is set up and acknowledged of God; and it has, therefore, claims upon the obedience of the Christian man wherever he may be. One of the New Testament epistles takes up this question, the very one which, more than any other, brings out the foundations, characteristics, and effects of Christianity, as far as regards the individual. I allude to the epistle to the Romans, the most comprehensive of all the Pauline epistles. There we have, first of all, man's condition fully developed; then the redemption that is in Christ Jesus. The first three chapters are devoted to the subject of man's ruin; the next five, to the redemption that God has wrought as the answer to the ruin of man. Then, in the three chapters which follow, you have the course of the dispensations of God-that is, His dealings, on a large scale, with Israel and the Gentiles. After that we have the practical, or, at least, the perceptive part of the epistle :first, in chap. 12:, the relations of Christians to one another, and then, after a gradual transition, to enemies at the close; and next, their relation to the powers that be (chap. 13:). The very expression-"the powers that be"-seems intended to embrace every form of government under which Christians might be placed. They were to be subject, not merely under a king, but where there was another character of sovereign; not only where the government was ancient, but let it be ever so newly established. The business of the Christian is to show respect to all who are in authority, to pay honor to whom honor is due, owing no man anything save love. What makes this so particularly strong, is, that the emperor then reigning was one of the worst and most cruel men that ever filled the throne of the Caesars. And yet there is no reserve or qualification, nay the very reverse of an insinuation that, if the emperor ordered what was good, the Christians were to obey, but, that if not, they were free from their allegiance. The Christian is called to obey-not always Nero or Nebuchadnezzar, but God evermore. The consequence is, that this at once delivers from the very smallest real ground for charging a godly person with being a rebel. I am aware that nothing will of necessity bar a Christian from an evil reputation. It is natural for the world to speak ill of one that belongs to Christ-to Him whom they crucified. But from all real ground for such an accusation this principle delivers the soul. Obedience to God remains untouched; but I am to obey "the powers that be" in whatever is consistent with obeying God, no matter how trying.

The light of these faithful Jews was far short of what the Christian ought to have now:they had only that revelation of God which was the portion of Israel. But faith always understands God:whether there is little light or much, it seeks and finds the guidance of God. And these men were in the exercise of a very simple faith. The emperor had put forth a decree that was inconsistent with the foundation of all truth -the one true God. Israel was called expressly to maintain that Jehovah was such, and not idols. Here was a king who had commanded them to fall down and worship an image. They dare not sin; they must obey God rather than man. It is nowhere said that we must ever disobey man. God must be obeyed-whatever the channel, God always. If I do a thing, ever so right in itself, on the mere ground that I have a right to disobey man under certain circumstances, I am doing the lesser of two evils. The principle for a Christian man is never to do evil at all. He may fail, as I do not deny; but I do not understand a man quietly settling down that he must accept any evil whatever. It is a heathenish idea. An idolater that had not the revealed light of God could know no better. Yet you will find Christian persons using the present confession of the condition of the Church as an excuse tor persevering in known evil, and saying, Of two evils we must choose the lesser! But I maintain that, whatever the difficulty may be, there is always the path of God for the godly to walk in. Why then do I find practical difficulty? Because I wish to spare myself. If I compound for even a little evil, the broad way of ease and honor lies open, but I sacrifice God and come under the power of Satan. It was just the advice that Peter gave our Lord when He spoke of being put to death. " Far be it from thee-pity thyself-Lord."

So with the Christian. By doing a little evil, by compromising the conscience, by avoiding the trial that obeying God always entails, no doubt a person may thus often avoid a good deal of the world's enmity, and gain its praise, because he does well to himself. But if the eye is single in this, God always must have His rights, always be owned in the soul as having the first place. If God is compromised by anything required of me, then I must obey God rather than man. Where this is held fast, the path is perfectly plain. There may be danger, possibly even death staring us in the face, as it was on this occasion. The king was incensed that these men should dare to say, "O Nebuchadnezzar, we are not careful to answer thee in this matter." Not careful to answer him! And what were they careful for? It was a question that concerned God. Their care was to "render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's." They were in the very spirit of that word of Christ before it was given. They had walked dutifully in the place the king had assigned them:there was no charge against them. But now there arose a question that deeply affected their faith, and they felt it. It was God's glory that had been interfered with, and they trusted in Him.

Accordingly they say, " If it be so, our God, whom we serve, is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace." How beautiful this is ! In the presence of the king, who never thought of serving any but himself, and who saw none but himself to serve, they say, "Our God, whom we serve." They had served the king faithfully before, because they had ever served God:and they must serve God still, even if it had the appearance of not serving the king. But they have confidence in God. " He will deliver us out of thy hand, O king." This was not mere truth in the abstract; it was faith. "He will deliver us." But mark something better still. "But if not, be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up." Even if God will not put forth His power to deliver us, we serve Himself:we will not serve the gods of this world. Oh, beloved reader, in what a place of dignity faith in the living God puts the man who walks in it. These men were at that moment the object of all the attention of the Babylonish empire. What was the image then ? It was forgotten. Nebuchadnezzar himself was powerless in presence of his captives of Israel.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

God's Voice To Oppressors.

James 5:

"Go to now, ye rich men, weep and howl for your miseries that shall come upon you.

Your riches are corrupted, and your garments are moth eaten. Your gold and silver is cankered ; and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have heaped treasure together in the last days. Behold, the hire of the laborers who have reaped down your fields, which is of you kept back by fraud, crieth; and the cries of them which have reaped are entered into the ears of the Lord of armies. Ye have lived in pleasure on the earth, and been wanton; ye have nourished your hearts, as in a day of slaughter. Ye have condemned and killed the just; and he doth not resist you."

TO " THE JUST."

"Be patient therefore, brethren, unto the coming of the Lord. Behold, the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth, and hath long patience for it, until he receive the early and latter rains. Be ye also patient; stablish your hearts:for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh."

Conclusion.

Could we be counted among " the just" if we "resist " the oppressors? If we band together to protect ourselves against them? If we take it into our hands to redress our wrongs? Nay, nay, for then we turn oppressors ourselves and come down on the same level with them. "The just" are those in whom Christ's ways are reproduced, and Christ was a sufferer here. The day of His rights, and of ours, is not yet.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

An Answer To The Question Of A Correspondent.

(Extracted.)

We have yet another question, however, to consider, in connection with this thought of Christ's priesthood being exercised entirely in heaven:and that is, if His be, as the apostle insists, entirely a Melchisedek priesthood, how else could it be exercised than after death, when the "many priests" of Aaron's order proved their incompetency by the fact that " they were not able to continue, by reason of death;" while Christ's Melchisedek character is seen in this that He abideth for ever, " in the power of an endless life ?"

Now, whatever the difficulty here, it is certain that Christ was "a merciful and faithful High-priest to make propitiation; " and that therefore He was High-priest before propitiation was, or could be made. If death negatived the possibility of His being this at that time, then it would necessarily forbid His being so until resurrection had taken place:that is as plain as it is really decisive; for His resurrection was already the witness of the acceptance of His work, and consequently, of propitiation (that is, appeasal) having been already made. Propitiation is by blood, and that was shed on earth; nor, when this was shed, did it wait an hour for the tokens of its acceptance. His own words, " It is finished," were followed immediately by the rending of the veil, by which the holiest was opened to man; where Christ has now gone in to take His place for us with God, in the value of that blood, our Representative.

Thus, being made perfect, He is greeted (or, "hailed") of God a High-priest after the order of Melchisedek. Notice, it is not the same word as when it is said, He was " called" to the priesthood. He is hailed now as Victor after His conflict, when the power of that endless life that was His had been manifested in His victory over death and him that had the power of it. Death had been but the sword which Christ had turned against him who wielded it; and over Him it could not have dominion, when once to do the will, of God He had descended into it. The eternal life which was in Him could not be touched by it; and the giving up of earthly life-which for the merely human priests had ended their priesthood fully, and taken them entirely away from the scene of their earthly ministry-could not affect the office of Him who could answer the appeal to Him as Lord of the dying malefactor with the royal words, "This day shalt thou be with Me in Paradise." Thus was He still Priest and King all through. Presently, with the keys of death and hades at His girdle, He is hailed in resurrection as the Royal Priest; not made so then, but approved as fully manifested such already. While the disciples gaze upward after Him, " a cloud received Him out of their sight" (Acts 1:9). Was it mere earthly vapor? or was it not rather the welcome home of the manifest glory ? Was it not fit, (as when even for the objects of His redeeming love the Lord of glory, not leaving it to angelic hosts to give them welcome, " the Lord Himself shall descend from heaven") that He who was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father,-whom He Himself describes as "running" to put His arms round one poor returning prodigal-should thus, the angels nowhere as yet seen, be welcomed back to where He had been before, even when creation as yet was not called into being by His word ?

(Extracted from Numerical Bible, Notes on Heb.)

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

I Will Come To Thee, And I Will Bless Thee,

(Ex. XX. 24).

O that Thou wouldst bless me indeed (1 Chron. 4:10).

'Lie still, my child, thou needest this quiet rest,
Nay, fret not at the hand that laid thee here;
For I have purposed that thou shalt be blest,
To Me thou art dear.
I know thy service, fraught with love, and prayer,
But come with Me apart;
I'll rest thee, strengthen thee, and banish care,
And overflow thy heart.

Just leave these broken threads of toil to Me,
I've marked thy deep desire, and fervent call;
And every burden thou hast borne for Me,
I know it all.
But just this little while I crave thy heart,
In shadowed quietness;
From every earthly heart and voice apart,
That I may richly bless.

I love My "servant," and thy service well,
And long with that "well done," thy work to crown;
And face to face My joy in thee to tell,
My love to own.
This seeming cloud which cross thy path doth run,
'Tis but My loving hand;
To shield thy head, thy feet, from burning sun,
And glaring desert sand.

No cloud can cover thee, but I am there,-
Thy sorrows, trials, griefs, and joys are Mine;
Thy loved ones too, are My unceasing care,
And all that's thine.
This seemingly untimely break will hold-
(Tho' now it seem but pain.)
Some hidden treasure purchased not with gold,
Some deep eternal gain.

If on thy willing hands, I've laid Mine own,
A little while, to rest, and keep them still-
To teach thee better than thou'st ever known,
To do My will-
Then rest, with Me, it will not be for long,
And in eternity
Thou'lt sing a deeper, sweeter, fuller song,
Of praise, than else could be.

H. McD.

Plainfield, Feb. 12th 1901.

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF19

Faith And Faith's Testimony To Christ.

Gen. 13:14-18; 14:1-24; 15:1.

What a peaceful scene closes the thirteenth chapter of Genesis-a scene which is marked by faith, as the early part of the chapter is marked by the absence of it. Lot chooses, and there is no faith in his choice. In fact, where is there ever to be found faith in this world-bordering child of God? for child of God he must be, according to 2 Pet. 2:7.But he is never said to walk with God, and God, on other hand, never links His name with Lot. The nearest we get to anything like faith as connected with him is that he accompanied Abraham, and this is not faith at all. Faith never has a creature for its object, be that creature a saint; but only God. But is not just now the intention to do more than simply allude to the fact that Lot chose, while Abraham let God chose for him, and to call attention to the contrast.

Let us pass on, then, to Abraham. God calls him to lift up his eyes and to look northward, southward, eastward and westward; and He calls upon him also to rise and walk through the land in its length and breadth, saying that all this land is his and his seed's. How much more he gets than Lot-how much better is God's choice for His people than their choice ! And to this gracious promise Abraham, as it were, bows his head in faith and worship; faith, because we read immediately of his tent, the witness that he is a pilgrim for the present and that the promise of the inheritance of the land is received in faith for the future; worship, for he builds an altar to Jehovah. Notice, moreover, that he dwells in Mamre, "the place of fatness." I repeat, then, how peaceful is this picture. God chooses; Abraham accepts the choice in faith and worship. But as we have in this chapter the strong contrast between Abraham and Lot, so we have in the next chapter a vivid contrast to this scene presented to us-the strife of kings- the strife of kings for mastery. We are brought, as it were, from the sanctuary in the thirteenth chapter out into the world of strife and turmoil in the fourteenth chapter. The four kings vanquish the five kings, and they take the spoils with "Lot, Abram's brother's son, and his goods." In other words, it is, as we may say, the same story of victory on the one hand and defeat on the other, that makes up the history of the world, one in the ascendency now, only to be put down, and another to take that place a little later; without stability and permanence anywhere, it is, and will continue to be, until He comes whose right it is to reign, nothing but overturn, overturn, overturn.

But how strikingly Abraham now brings into this scene in his own person, the hopes of the former chapter; he is the man of faith, whether in receiving God's promise, or in pursuing and conquering kings. He overtakes and overcomes the kings and recovers both Lot and Lot's goods and also the spoils. In the victory that has just before been recorded, do we not see, as it were, the potsherds striving with the potsherds-the world claiming the world from the world. In Abraham's victory, as I take it, we have faith laying hold of all for God, or, to speak more correctly, for Christ, as we shall see presently.

This brings us to Melchisedek, the central figure here; and how can anything be more perfect than the introduction of Melchisedek, type of Christ, just at this point ? For if Abraham lays hold of and recovers for God all that the world has claimed for itself, to whom shall it be given,-at whose feet shall it be laid ? Christ's surely. And so to Melchisedek Abraham gives tithes of all. Tithes which, while they witness that Abraham is owning Melchisedek's superiority and taking himself an inferior place, are surely also the pledge and earnest of the world being put into the hand of Christ; and that it is a question of the turning over of all things and all peoples to the Lord Jesus, the Melchisedek King-Priest, seems clear, for in the first place, God's millennial name, "most high God," possessor of heaven and earth, is four times used here :Melchisedek is "priest of the most high God" and blesses Abraham as of the "most high God;" and again he says:"Blessed be the most high God." Again Abraham lifts up his hand to Jehovah the "most high God," possessor of heaven and earth, that he will not be enriched from a thread to a shoe latchet by the king of Sodom. (Now the millennium is the time of Christ's universal dominion). And again, if we look at the 110th psalm, the Melchisedek King-Priest psalm, we see the same thing-His people are made willing in the day of His power; His enemies are put beneath His feet-His dominion is universal. How perfect, then, that this One whom God has appointed heir of all things should be brought before us just after Abraham has, as it were, taken possession of all things, not for himself, but for Another, and that he should bring them, in spirit, as we may say, and lay them at the feet of the Lord Jesus Christ.

What a blessed thing to know, too, that God's King is God's Priest. The two offices are joined in one Person ; the One that holds the scepter over men is the One that was Priest for men's sins, and throughout the ages of the Lord's dominion this blessed fact abides for the joy and worship of all His own in heaven and earth. And, again, as it seems to me, the most awful of all bitter remembrances among the lost will be that the Name to which they bow is the name which means "Saviour;" the One whom they own as King and Lord is the One who died that they might have been delivered from the flames of an eternal hell. Notice how similar lines of thought with reference to Christ are brought before us in meditating on the fifth of Revelation. The Lion of the tribe of Judah, the One who is rising up and going forth with resistless strength, is immediately described as "a Lamb as it had been slain." In other words, God's King is the Man who was down here amongst men, perfected as a Priest, by acquaintance with infirmity, need and sorrow (Heb. 4:14, 15, 5:7-10).

The remark was made just now that Abraham did not claim the world for himself; he really only claims it in faith for Christ, and now that he has, in spirit, presented it to Him, he declines to have anything further to do with it – he turns it all over to Sodom's king for the present. He has been enriched by God, by God's promise, and he will not be enriched at the hands of the world ; he will rather wait in faith to inherit those promises. Refusing anything from the king of Sodom seems to be as beautiful an expression of faith, in its way, as is the act of giving tithes of all to Melchisedek, which we have just been looking at. And now, passing on to the opening of the 15th chapter, we have God's beautiful answer to Abraham's faith. Has he just now refused to be enriched by the world? Then God will enrich him Himself, yea, enrich him by Himself:" I am thy shield and thy exceeding great reward." In the 13th chapter God gave him a goodly portion – the land of Canaan – but here He gives him something quite beyond this – God Himself is his portion :How blessed!

So that we see Abraham as a man of faith, whether a pilgrim and a worshiper, as we first looked at him, or whether as the same pilgrim (for we read that they went and told "Abraham the Hebrew" – the passenger-the pilgrim), laying hold of the spoils for God and bringing those spoils to God's king-priest; or again, refusing aught of those spoils for himself from the king of Sodom. And when the Lord Jesus affirms that "Abraham rejoiced to see my day and he saw it and was glad" does it not seem that this would apply to the occasions we have been looking at as well as, surely, to others also? Is it not indeed faith, and faith's testimony to Christ? F. G. P.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

Covet Earnestly The Best Gifts”

1 Cor. 12:31.

That we are in the difficult times of the last days ' I needs, for one that is before God, no demonstration. The difficulties increase continually, and the peculiar characters of evil foretold as to be found in the last days are more and more becoming apparent. Because iniquity abounds, the love of many has waxed cold. Because of the prevalence of error, truth itself is undervalued and discredited. Dogmatic teaching is more and more set aside, for that which is distinctively thought of as "practical," in opposition to it. That which is the first character; of the Word of inspiration, that it is "profitable for doctrine " (and what is first in Scripture really comes first), if its value be discredited, discredits necessarily all that is connected with it. Confucianism and Christianity are then found nearly upon the same level. Confucius has excellent moral precepts, and practically no God. This is what more and more we are coming to, or at least we need to know but little about Him. Morality and altruism, these are enough for us. Look at the jangle of creeds and sects. What have they bred for us but that kind of disregard for one another which is the source of so many evils? Theological hatred is the worst kind of hatred. Religious persecution is the most intense and evil of its kind; and at any rate, it is so hard to discover what the truth is. Bring in from various quarters a dozen professing Christians, and try to harmonize their different statements. Yet good men are good men all the world over, and it is even proverbial that the heart may be better than the creed. Why trouble, then, so much about the creed? Why take so much pains to build up systems which begin to disintegrate as soon as they are built up ? "In doubtful things, liberty; in all things, charity," comes to have large application with the growing doubt about so many things.

But what are we to do, then, with Scripture; which certainly is, as to its character, essentially dogmatic ? Well, the human element is perhaps the thing most apparent, and if Scripture is even thus in agreement with itself, a great many people have not found it out. It is even claimed to be the work of the Spirit now to disengage the kernel from the husk and to produce for us a new Bible relieved of things which have long been an incubus upon it. The more the "higher critic" pares down Scripture, the more his love increases for the Scripture so pared down, and he finds wonderful power now in that which, if it be less obviously divine, yet appeals to him the more for its kinship with the human.

Difficulties! why, how many are the difficulties here ? difficulties which who shall settle for us ? For, alas, our faith in human wisdom itself must necessarily be shaken by them all, and one verse of Scripture remains for us, perhaps, as the most significant of its many verses, that, " If any man think that he knoweth anything, he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know."

What are we to do, then? Well, if Scripture has lost its power, there is indeed nothing to be done. They are but few probably, after all, who will give up Christianity for Buddhism or its kindred Theosophy. We shall not in the mass leave Moses for Mohammed; and if heaven's beauteous vision has at last failed us, it has at least so made apparent the dismal failure of all else that one can positively hope for no substitute for it. What man or what commit-tee of the wisest men will give us really another Bible? They are better at destruction then at reconstruction ; better in mutilating that which for them has become a spiritless corpse than in breathing the breath of life into any new form.
Well, let us despair of ourselves; that is all right. Alas, it is the world's wisdom that has mocked and cheated us. With the despair of our own, there may be at least a cry to the unknown God, which shall bring unlooked for answer. At least one of the most widely discredited doctrines at once begins to dawn upon us as possibly true, that if any man would be wise, he must become a fool that he may be wise. And after all, sin is in the world surely. It is not a mere name and nothing else. There is such a thing as sin and a great deal of it. Has it not, perchance, clouded the mind so as to produce this darkness which we are burdened with, and in which all philosophies, all fruits of the human intellect, are withering, and are bound to wither? Thank God for the Voice that breaks out even through the darkness with its sweet, comforting, powerful assurance, so strange in its mingling of the human and divine together:"Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest."

Have you rest, dear reader? Has this wonderful word been fulfilled to you ? And have you learned to say, Whatever else may deceive, this has not deceived ; here is a Voice which has proved its truth in my inmost soul? Here is the solid footing upon which alone we can stand, with the earth and all that is in it shaking around us. Here is the Voice which can alone settle all difficulties for us, a Voice like which there is no other. How blessed to recognize in Him whose voice it is, the true "human element" which men think they prize so highly, which appeals, even as the science of the day does, to "justification by verification," and bids you verify for yourself- each for himself-its utterances. Once upon the rock here, how the fog clears! how the cold mists roll off the face of nature everywhere! and whatever may be the shapes of evil that we see, yet at least there is no more indistinctness, no uncertainty; and not the evil rules, but the good; not man but God. How wonderful a book then is Scripture! Is there another like it? Shall I permit any, with the highest claim from men's schools or colleges, to tell me what of it I am to believe, or what I may disbelieve? Upon Scripture, from first to last, from Genesis to Revelation, the living truth has put its seal; and what a field of knowledge now opens to me, while the fresh life stirs within my soul to make it all-as far as the finite may apprehend the Infinite-to make it all my own! Christian reader, is this what Scripture is for you? a Voice everywhere alike in its certainty as in its sublimity, a Voice that has power not over the mind alone, but over the conscience and over the heart? Is it something with which you make no conditions, but which claims your obedience, and which you obey ? In every part is it that? in every sphere that is accessible to man? in every department of nature? If all that can be called-is worthy to be called,-science? Then, if this be so, you have found what will be the solution of all the difficulties even of the last days; and amid all these you will stand master of yourself, because in the freedom given by another Master; one who has not received-thank God-"the spirit of cowardice, but of power and of love and of a sound mind" (2 Tim. 1:7).

These words are from one of those epistles which, with the fore-thought of the love that breathes everywhere through Scripture, have been provided for us, just for these last days in which we are; and they reveal the spirit of a man who was in his last days upon earth, and with shadow everywhere around him as to his circumstances. Not only was it upon the world, but the Church itself was passing into the shadow. Souls over whom he had rejoiced were departing from him. He was in prison, in the grip of imperial Rome, in the hands of the pagan persecutor, but with a soul as clear, as bright, as glad as ever it had been since the light of the opened heavens had revealed One in whose face was the glory of God, a glory which ever went with him and ceased not. How good to be where he was! His own heart could find no better wish for all around him than that they might be almost and altogether such as he was, except those bonds!
But he draws every believing soul into the same covert of that glory in which he stood himself. God has not given us "a spirit of cowardice, but of power and of love and of a sound mind." We are not Pauls, true; but the sources of blessing which were his are ours, and the ability to draw from them, if only our hearts are true to the truth as his was, no atom of divergence allowed from the path on which his compass guided, doing one thing," forgetting the things which are behind and reaching forth unto those things which are before, pressing towards the mark for the prize of the high calling (or the calling on high) of God in Christ Jesus" (Phil. 3:13, 14). If this be our mind what can arrest an energy which the Spirit gives? If this be not our mind, how can we think even of facing the difficulties which are on every side? There will be nothing for us but the gloom of despair, or the worse alternative of a heart steeling itself to indifference, yielding to the evil for which it has no remedy, the very abounding of iniquity causing, alas, the loyalty of its love to falter and relax. How necessary for our whole course as Christians that the full assurance of hope should animate us at all times! Conflict there will be. We shall not be able to escape from meeting the tide which is against us. The enjoyed presence of God will not withdraw us from this, but enable us for it, and how necessary for us then to realize what it is to be "strong in the Lord and in the power of His might"! to realize the triumph which Christ Himself has accomplished, not for Himself alone, but for us also whom He bids follow Him through a world in which we shall have tribulation, but which He has overcome ! How necessary for us to be in the spirit of those ringing appeals "to him that overcometh," when the history depicted in the Lord's words to the churches is being enacted before our eyes! Assuredly we have a sphere of our own into which the conflict around us cannot enter, and our happiness lies just in being able fully to enjoy this, to make our own the things that are our own, and to live in the life which is really life. And it is just here too that we learn most surely what the world is, in a way not given by the must intimate acquaintance with the world.

But what is the bearing of all this upon the subject before us, in which we are exhorted to "covet earnestly the best gifts "? There are some things, therefore, which it is right to covet, and here, strangely enough, where it is not only permitted but enjoined, people are the slowest to do this. If God is giving, it should be a matter of course that one would seek the very best of the gifts He has to give. But is it so? Alas, gifts as they are, they seem to many, nevertheless, burdened with conditions which almost destroy their reality as such. To seek the best gifts of God, supposes, in fact, a heart not in the world, but with Himself outside it, while He has interests in the world indeed with which they have largely to do. Now here it is that the tangle of things, and the difficulties arising from the apparent hopelessness of the condition, of necessity deadens the desire for that which, after all, seems so ineffective to better the conditions and thus in itself so doubtful as good. The Church is in the world, that Church which Christ loves and has given Himself for it, that greatest of gifts from which all other gifts proceed. Nevertheless, what has been the history of the Church? and what a spectacle does it present to-day? How little is it conquering the adverse element? How much, rather, does the world seem to be conquering it, so that everywhere it must make concessions to it! The Church is in the world indeed, but alas, much more than this, the world is in the Church; and these are mingled together in a way which seems quite impossible to be remedied, the world which should have been conquered being manifestly rather the conqueror, and Christianity being molded in its hands into forms which more and more degrade it to the level of one of the world-religions, if even it be the best. What, then, has come of the gifts with which Christ has endowed His Church? Things widen in influence just as they are lower in character until, in "the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man," the positiveness of Christianity disappears, its angles are smoothed off, and he whom the inscribing angel cannot write among "the names of those who love the Lord" may yet, as "one who loves his fellow-men," find his where the vision of the poet saw it, when

''Lo! Ben-ahem's name led all the rest! "

Such difficulties are, of course, difficulties only for the Christian. For the man of the world himself,
the darkness is light just as the light is darkness. For the Christian, they are largely doing just what is most thoroughly Satan's work for him, producing discouragement and perplexity with that dulling of spiritual energy which is the necessary consequence. The gifts which Christ has given are for the Church's equipment; but how differently does that sound when we go back to the time when it began, "fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners," from now when, battered in the conflict, its ranks divided and opposing one another, it scarcely knows itself! It is just when we realize most what according to God's thoughts it should have been, that we are prone most to the worst discouragement. "The body of Christ! "-but what is a body of which the members are scattered here and there, and hardly anything of the form remains as Scripture shows it? Here indeed it requires the power of the Spirit of God to lift one up to face that which is seen with the brighter reality of that which is unseen. This is what is so sorely needed to-day. We have grown old in the wilderness. The eternal life that is in us seems to be susceptible of weakness and decay like any other life. Revivals there have been, many, but how surely followed, and how soon, by a corresponding depression and degeneration! But one more wave seems wanting, now with the end so near, to lift us right up into a scene where failure any more will be impossible. Shall there be that or shall the Church's latter end be but in terrible contrast to its beginning? The answer must be in the heart of the individual and it must be given to God, not man. That the Spirit abides, we know. That He abides to glorify Christ in His people we must not question. Grieved, insulted, quenched as He has been, is there not yet power with Him, power that He can manifest to accomplish that which to man is indeed impossible?

But let us look more closely at what the gifts that we are exhorted to covet, mean. Gifts are, in the Church, that which fits the body together as such. They are the functions of the members which make them, therefore, practically members. It is impossible, therefore, to be a member of the body without the gift that it implies. It is this that the apostle dwells upon in the epistle to the Corinthians which speaks of the body as it exists on earth. The gifts, therefore, differ from one another, not by reason of defect in the organization, but rather of the completeness of the whole according to God. There is everywhere defect in the members, if you forget that they are but members. If they are independent individualities, then they are most unfitted to stand alone. They are made for each other and for the whole. Do we realize it, dear fellow-Christians? Do we feel in ourselves our dependence upon all others, as their dependence, too, upon ourselves? We must not shrink back in false humility from that last thought. The apostle will expressly tell us that "much more those members of the body which seem to be more feeble are necessary." We cannot, therefore, put away this from us by any thought of our feebleness. Nay, even the feebleness itself is, as it is put, in some sense that which makes us necessary to one another. Eve was necessary to Adam by the very feebleness which should draw out for her his strength; and Adam too had his side of feebleness which made it not good that the man should dwell alone. Thus we are needed for each other's development; and the ministry of each to each, in order that the whole may fill its place. Alas it is this shrinking from the thought of universal ministry which has, first of all, split up the Church itself into two divisions, the ministers and those ministered to:false in the whole thought of it; and not the less because of the truth contained, which is just what gives the falsehood its fatal facility of acceptance. To speak of what is the most plausible and the most fatal, all have not the gift of teaching,-true; but of this is bred a class of teachers who know not the first principle of their calling, which is to educate others into independence of themselves; and a much larger class of half-educated scholars, to whom the time when they ought to be teachers, of which the apostle speaks (Heb. 5:12), never comes,-never is expected to come. They have resigned their title as possessors of that Spirit who searches the deep things of God into the hands of those more competent in intellect, more taught in the schools of men, devoted to spiritual studies as those in secular occupations cannot be. Thus clergy and laity came about by a natural application of the principle of a division of labor, by which one class could at more ease pursue the world, while the other enjoyed privileges and acquired a power such as ever the heart of man has craved and rejoiced in. But the sense of immediate dependence upon God and confidence in Him became proportionately weakened; the Bible which the true teacher would have opened and made familiar became gradually darker and less accessible, or lighted with weird and distracting corpse-lights of the imagination, which no hand could reach to test them by the touch of truth. F. W. G.

( To be continued, if the Lord will.)

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Volume HAF19

Fragment

" If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth. For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. When Christ who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with him in glory " (Col. 3:1-4).

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

Signs Of A Revival.

The signs of a revival, whether in an individual soul, in an assembly, or in a neighborhood, will be found to be substantially the same. A revival of true, vital godliness in the souls of believers, or an increased number of conversions, is the work of God's Spirit. Strictly speaking, He is the only Revivalist. To apply the term to any of the servants of Christ is a mistake. Hence, the signs and fruits of a genuine revival, must be in accordance with truth and holiness, for He is "the Spirit of truth," and "the Holy Spirit." All that is contrary thereto, must be attributed to man's faultiness in the details of the work.

1. The first sign, or indication, of a reviving of the Lord's work in a neighborhood, we believe to be, afresh quickening of His own people in that place. Like the fire that has become set and dull, it needs to be stirred up, so that its energies may be renewed, and that they may spread forth on all sides. In like manner, with the Lord's own people who may have become dull and inactive, they need stirring up. But when the divine life in the soul has been stirred up by the Spirit of God, then it will manifest fresh life, and fresh energy. A heavenly freshness will pervade the soul, as if it had received new life. This blessed work may begin, and for some time be manifest, in only one or two individuals; but where the Spirit of God is, there is gathering power, and there numbers must soon increase. By this means, the people of God are brought into sympathy and fellowship with His mind and purpose. Now they can work together. The love of the world in its many forms, will immediately and greatly decline. Obedience to its exorbitant demands will be refused. And on the other hand, love to Christ, and true subjection of heart to His claims, will greatly and rapidly increase. To meet the desires of His heart will now be the delight of each newly-invigorated soul..

2. The second sign will be manifested in a revived spirit of prayer. The tender sensibilities of the renewed mind will soon be made to feel the coldness and deadness that prevails around. This will lead to an earnest desire for prayer on the behalf of such. Time and place will be found. Difficulties hitherto insurmountable will be overcome. In some places there are now prayer-meetings between five and six o'clock in the morning, to accommodate those who commence work at six. This sign is now so generally received as a token for good, that persons are in the habit of saying, " I have no doubt that the Lord is about to work there; the people are coming together for prayer." Still, there may be an increase as to the number of prayer-meetings, without much increase to the spirit of prayer. An effort may be made to "get up" prayer-meetings in one place, because they have been made a blessing in another; or because they are becoming general. In some instances this may be little better than imitation. But where the work has been begun by the Spirit of God, there will be a real, earnest spirit of prayer. There will be such felt need, and such conscious weakness, that prayer will be eagerly desired. Any hour, any place, that affords the desired opportunity will be heartily welcomed. The less display, the more congenial to the heart. There is a wonderful difference between merely coming to a prayer-meeting, and coming in the true spirit of prayer. The one may be a formality, the other is a living reality; the former may be gone through in a dull, sleepy state, but the latter will be manifested in the stirring energies of life-in a spirit of real waiting upon God, and earnest crying unto Him.

3. The third sign may be, an increased love for precious souls. The spiritual vision of the revived ones is now so bright and clear, that the fearful condition of unbelievers, and the solemn realities of the future, are vividly before them, and greatly affect them. Hence, the eternal welfare of the unconverted becomes a subject of the deepest interest. They will think much about them, affectionately entreat them, and constantly pray to the Lord about them. Their love for precious, immortal souls will grow exceedingly. The love of Christ Himself for them is seen in a new light. His glory in their salvation, and His dishonor through their unbelief, are differently felt. The perishing soul is now, as it were, seen in His light, and loved with His love. Oh, what a change! what a happy change, as to their love for precious souls. When things are in a low state within the Church, souls that are outside are but little cared for.

4. There will now be efforts made answering to this love, We have observed, in such times of refreshing, that there is not only a difference in praying, but also in preaching. What plainness-what earnestness-what beseeching- what depth of feeling, is exhibited; and how intensely bent the preacher is upon the one thing, namely, to win souls to Christ. The Church has been awakened, aroused, blessed, and has caught the sacred fire. Everyone is seeking to do something for the glory of the Lord, the building up of the Church, and the ingathering of precious souls. Attention and kindness are shown to strangers. Children are cared for. The salvation of their souls is earnestly desired. The thoughtless, outside, are thought of, and efforts are made to. bring them in. Tract distribution, in various ways, is attended to with the most lively and hopeful interest. All are at work, and all are earnest and happy in their work. A revived, healthy, vigorous, elevated tone, and self-denying effort now characterize the assembly of God.

5. Another happy feature of a true revival is an enlarged expectation of blessing. Not only is blessing prayed for, and efforts made to obtain it, but it is expected. God is trusted. His grace to meet every need is counted upon. Answers to prayer are looked for. Blessing to souls in connection with the preaching is searched for, and prayer is made that the search may not be in vain. It is no longer the mere routine of service, the use of means, as it is called, and leaving the results with God without being concerned as to what these results are. But now, in the improved state of things, diligent search is made as to what ground the seed has fallen upon, and where it has taken root.

At such times, and on some occasions, it has pleased the Lord to give special faith to some of His servants in expecting blessing. So much so, that they have been led to pray for it, not only with expectation, but with certainty. And through them the faith of others has been strengthened and encouraged to look to the Lord in the fulness of expectation, and in the confident assurance that "showers of blessing" (Ezek. 34:26) would be poured down. Such faith can never be disappointed. Numbers of conversions must follow-the blessing must extend. The power of God is now manifest in the assembly, even if His special servants are absent. The work cannot stand still; it moves on steadily and surely. Conversions bear the special seal of God. Unbelievers are more thoroughly overpowered by the character of the work, than by the power of preaching. There is no room for criticism in such remarkable cases of blessing. God is present of a truth. His power is felt, and numbers of the most unlikely, and the least expected, bow before Him, confessing their sins, and worshiping Him as the Saviour-God. Oh, what a blessed, happy, God-honoring state for an assembly to be in. To be brought into such close communion with God-such real fellowship with Him in His work of grace-such blessed nearness, as to make the praying ones feel as if they were " inside the veil." Oh, who would not earnestly breathe after such a state of things ? Who would not seek to be blessed with the bright beams of such wondrous grace ? Who would not fervently cry to the Lord that He would so revive His work amongst us, and give us to taste and see such floods of blessing ?
May the above thoughts, which have been suggested by such scenes, lead many who may read this paper, solemnly to judge themselves before the Lord as to how far their souls are in the present current of the Holy Spirit, and whether they are now praying and looking for such seasons of blessing, in this the day of His most marvelous grace.
"WHY CAME WE FORTH OUT OF EGYPT?"

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

The Church In Its Progress Towards Rome.

Some leaves from an inspired history.

(The following extract from the notes on Acts in the Numerical Bible is republished here for various reasons. First, to draw attention to the deeper meanings which constantly underlie the scripture histories, and distinguish them from any other histories that can be found :one of the manifest signs of their inspiration as well as an encouragement to us to look more deeply into every detail. Secondly, for its own sad but necessary warning as to man's failure everywhere in keeping the choicest blessings committed to him, a " Cease ye from man," which brings us to confidence alone in "God, and the word of His grace." Once let our hold be lost upon this anchorage, all other confidences, whatever, are but false and ensnaring. The Church's decline began in the souls of individuals:we may here learn how many lessons of the dangers that beset us, -put how many a question to our hearts!)

With the apostle's voyage to Rome the book of the Acts ends. The strangeness of such an ending has been often commented upon, and naturally; especially for those who imagine a history of progress on to final triumph for the Church on earth. We expect some correspondence between the history at large and this its specimen page; and to end with a shipwreck and the apostle of the Gentiles in a Roman prison gives an impression of an unfinished fragment instead of the perfect workmanship of the divine hand. But this proceeds from a wrong conception of what the Church's course was in fact to be, which all the sorrow and disaster of near nineteen centuries has for many been incompetent to remove. Allow the Scripture-statements their full weight, and the want of correspondence will be no longer felt :for the history is really that of a shipwreck and a prison; and instead of wondering any longer at the apparent contrast, we shall perhaps suspect that the similarity may be closer than it seems, and begin asking ourselves if the one is not indeed an allegory of the other.

The very name of Rome to us at the close of so many long years as have passed is predictive of disaster. Rome has through all its existence as a dominant world-power antagonized the gospel. Submit to it never really did. It took the name of Christian, but as a symbol of material conquest and political dominion; and thereby dragged in the dust what it professedly exalted. As already said, it was Judaized rather than Christianized, and with the Jewish spirit of legality drank in its bitter animosity to the gospel. The spirit of Rome was indeed always legal; but this legality now became ecclesiastical, sacerdotal, hierarchical, and necessarily persecuting. Begin Paul's captivity it did not, for it never knew him but as a prisoner. But keep him prisoner it did, until the time of God's release came. The picture does not go as far as this ; probably for the reason that after all this never has been,-never will be-complete; while what has taken place in this way is the mere mercy of God, and for us the instruction is in the causes leading to the disaster:causes which are still at work, and in which we may have part, if we do not avert it by self-judgment.

I. There are two parts in this account, the first of which consists of the voyage and shipwreck, ending
with the reaching land at Melita, or Malta. Here also there are two parts :the first, that in the ship of Adramyttium to Myra; the second, that in the ship of Alexandria, wrecked at Malta. The conflict of man's will with God's rule appears all through, though most conspicuously in the second part. The detail given all through should surely show us the interest that it should have for us, and that there is more in it by far than appears upon the surface.

All through, Paul is a prisoner; and yet with the clear vindication of the judge from any charge which should make him rightly this. Finally, he is shown to be the one to whom God has given the lives of all that sail with him. If we see in him the representative of the truth for which he stands, there can be in this no perversion of fact; and the sorrowful fact is that the truth of the gospel for which he stood has been, almost from the beginning of the Church's history until we reach the full development of the system which has Rome for its head, as it were, shut up, without formal accusation perhaps, yet fettered, and scarce permitted speech; professing Christians being its courteous guard, like Julius here, with a certain honor for Paul, but not freedom. Indeed, Julius himself has not his choice in this:he is under authority, a centurion of the Augustan cohort, an instrument of the world-power simply, and to whom in those interests with which he is identified, Paul is simply a stranger.

The meaning of his name may be variously given; that which would have significance of the kind that we are looking for, would be derived from "julus," a wheat sheaf, and might thus be "belonging to the wheat sheaf;" an enigma, no doubt, as we might expect:all here is necessarily enigmatical; but it is not impossible to penetrate the disguise.

Christ in resurrection is the significance of the one sheaf of wheat which stands out prominently in connection with the types. The sheaf of first fruits, presented to God between Passover and Pentecost, occupies a remarkable place in that series of feasts which we easily see to be specially related to Christian truths. Christ in resurrection was also, as we know, the basis of the gospel; and in a pre-eminent way, of Paul's gospel. It is Paul's gospel that specially identifies all believers with that wheat sheaf presented to God, that is, with Christ gone up to Him. If Julius in such an allegorized history, as we are taking this to be, represents in fact, as has already been suggested, those who, even while they might be true believers in Christ, yet were ignorant of those priceless truths with which the apostle of the Gentiles was identified, and who could thus hold the truth shut up, as it were in captivity, then the implications of the name he bore would be indeed significant. They who themselves had that Christian place of identification with the risen Christ which Paul's doctrine made so conspicuous, were yet in ignorance of the place and what belonged to it; that is, of Paul in the truth he carried; and however courteous to himself they might be, were but the instruments (yea, the imperial band) of the enemies of the truth he lived and died for. Look at the imperial band of the church fathers:do they not treat the apostle after this manner ? Are they not so many courteous Juliuses in this way ?

They are bound for Italy, all these, though it may well be not by a straight road. The first ship we find here is not going to Italy, but to the coast of Asia, and is a ship of Adramyttium – a name of which there is doubt as to the meaning, but it seems as if it might mean that "one must not haste," while Asia speaks of a "miry" shore. Spiritually at least, these things go well together. A lack of earnest diligence in the way is apt enough to have a slough for its terminus. Corinth had got so mired with the world at a very early date, though they knew little of it:they were reigning as kings, following their wills, as such a course implies, and not the guidance of the Spirit. The "best Ruler," as Aristarchus means, was with them all the way through, but we hear of him no more :he is a passenger and only that. Yet, as the Macedonian may remind us, He is the Spirit of worship, which putting God in His place is seen as of Thessalonica too, the means of "victory over that which brings into commotion." But so the start is made.

The next day they are at Zidon, still in what is properly Israelitish territory, though in fact in other hands. It means "taking the prey," and in Joshua's time we find it coming into Asher's portion (See notes on Josh. 19:28), and there in reference to victory over evil, which is indeed the portion of Asher, the "happy" saint. But in fact, as we know, in the common failure of Israel, Asher never did even conquer Zidon, which had many and great kings of its own, some of whom were in alliance with Israel afterwards. The "taking of prey'," so connected, would come to have a different meaning, and imply such a career of conquest as that upon which, when become conscious of her power, the Church soon started. The victory over the world which faith in the Son of God gives became exchanged for victory by which the things of the world became the possession of the victors. Thus the parable of the mustard-seed began to be fulfilled, and the Church to take rank among the powers of the world. Friends of Paul were still to be found, for whom victory over the world retained the old and contrasted principle of separation from it, crucified to it by the Cross. With these the apostle would still find communion, and hearts drawn to him.

But the ship of Adramyttium is bound for Asia ; and starting again, the winds are contrary, and she is forced under the lee of Cyprus. Cyprus means blossom, especially of the olive and the vine, and became identified in the Grecian mind with what is fair and lovely in nature, with Venus and her worship, the soft influences which woo and win man's heart. And here indeed is how the heart, realizing that after all the winds for the Christian voyager are contrary, would shelter itself under what in nature it can plead, and with truth also, God has made for man's enjoyment. So He has; and yet how easy to make enticement of it, the ship using it as her shelter to reach the "miry" shores of Asia beyond ! How all this fits together in the picture here ! Was not this in fact the history of declension in the Church of God ? a history so often repeated in individual experience that we cannot but know it all too well !

Not difficult is it to understand that beyond this there are dangers which Cilicia, Pamphylia, Lycia, all in different ways express. Cilicia is said to mean "which rolls, or overturns," and to play the Cilician is to be cruel and treacherous like these. Pamphylia would mean a union of various tribes; and their history seem to corresponds with this. Lycia is from lycus, a wolf, which whether referring to beast or man has no encouraging significance. In two of these names the dangers following the thirst for pleasure may be fitly indicated; the relaxation which it implies exposing to such dangers as the apostle speaks of to the Ephesians as the entering of grievous wolves, not sparing the flock; while the union of various tribes was truly what practically the church soon came to be as mingling with the world's various interests affected and molded it, making the diversity as apparent as the uniting tie. How soon did the Body of Christ cease to have visible expression; and the church united with the world become divided within itself !

Striking it is that here presently the end is reached of the first voyage at Myra, where the ship of Adramyttium is exchanged for another. If Pamphylia has the import which we see in it, the breaches of unity which it pictures would have need of the "ointment" of which Myra speaks. How many salves have been sought for this broken condition ! And the change of ship for a ship of Alexandria is still more plainly significant. Alexandria speaks of help given to men, or better, of the warding off from them impending danger. The new ship of the church is a human means adapted to that end, while openly pointing now towards Italy.
Notice how well all of this agrees together:the perils have been shown us, following self-indulgence and love of pleasure. The new vessel from Egypt, which stands all through Scripture for that independence of God, alas, how natural, and from Alexandria,-a human device for warding off danger,-and now with her course directly Rome-ward, towards which, in fact, indirectly, they have been going all the time,-all this speaks to us not uncertainly in what we have upon other grounds concluded to be an allegory of the Church. Most undeniably, for all who take their view from Scripture, the vessel of God's testimony has changed much since it came from His hands at the first; and there has been human shaping, taking its justification from expediency largely,-the warding off of dangers, real or imaginary. The simple eldership of the apostles' days has grown into an episcopate, more and more monarchical; and this into archiepiscopates and patriarchates, and from ministry to priesthood, and all the ranks of hierarchy conspicuously absent from the New Testament original. The "best Ruler "is little seen, and a mere passenger:there would be danger indeed in letting the blessed Spirit have that governing place which, at the beginning, was His. We have taken a fresh start clearly, and our vessel is Egyptian-Alexandrian; and we are manifestly on our way to Rome.

But still the wind is contrary; heaven does not vouchsafe its favors for some reason:and it is with difficulty, and after many days of sailing, that the vessel is got abreast of Cnidus. Cnidus means "chafing, nettling," and may be a bad augury for the new regime; and here they leave the coast of Asia for Crete.

The wind, still contrary, forces them to take refuge under the lee of Crete abreast of Salmone, a name which, like that of Salamis in Cyprus, seems to be derived from the breaking of the wave upon it. That of Crete seems to be derived from the Cherethim of the Old Testament, who, in the judgment of many, were its inhabitants. The meaning in that case would not be doubtful. The cherethim were the "cutters down, or cutters off," sometimes given as "executioners. " But the word was also very commonly applied to the making or "cutting "of a covenant, for which as a whole sometimes the one word stood. That the covenant of the Lord should connect itself with the cutting off of evil can be no mystery to us; and significant it is that it is in turning from the "miry" shores of Asia that Crete presents itself to us. Self-judgment would have been indeed the resource for the Church bemired with the world, and it is no wonder that it should present " Fair Havens" to the buffeted ship, or that the apostle's advice should be to winter there. Final rest indeed it could not be, but yet quite helpful against winter storm; but the ship of Alexandria, under the guidance of those belonging to it, will not stay there; and Julius of the imperial band, while courteous enough to the apostle, yet approves their choice. Alexandria seems a name peculiarly significant here, and the history of the church shows here indeed how the notion of "Crete" that came from Alexandria would be in grave enough contrast with the apostle's. "Cutting off" in the shape of asceticism, and even in covenant form, had indeed its home there. Monasticism in its pseudo-Christian form arose there:a direct descent from heathen principles and practice. " Fair Havens," with its city of the Rock (as Lasaea seems to mean) near by, did not suit with the ideal of the Alexandrians as Phenice did. Phenice means"palm," the constant figure of the righteous. Righteousness is not after all found in cutting off, and the city of the Rock intimates the corrective truth, distasteful naturally to the true ascetic. Its ideal is in this way
unattainable; and when, mocked by the softness of a favorable south wind, the vessel leaves the harbor that would have saved it, the storm blast Euroclydon descends upon it, and it is blown out irrevocably from all land.
The wind that now assails the ship is called in most manuscripts Euroclydon, but in the oldest Euraquilo. The one term means " the eastern wave " referring to the effect upon the waters. The latter, the "northeaster;" which has the sanction of most of the editors. The east, as we have seen elsewhere, is the quarter that speaks simply of adversity; the north is that which speaks of darkness, mystery, and spiritual evil. Taking Euraquilo as the best attested reading, we find it also to be the most significant. It speaks not merely of adversity, but of Satanic influence:in the case of the Church, besides persecution, of evil doctrine; and such were, in fact, the influences which assailed the early Christian. In the epistle to Smyrna, which stands second in that apocalyptic series in which many have learned to trace the successive stages of the Church's history, we have on the one hand the ten days of tribulation, (the persecution under the Roman emperors), and on the other, the blasphemy of the synagogue of Satan, who say they are Jews, and are not, but do lie. Doubtless, these work together, as the shout of the hunters, which drives the deer into the trap prepared. Judaism, as we know, favored that fusion with the world as well as those defensive methods which promised best protection from outside attack; while it was itself the most complete attack upon the vitals of Christianity. And the same two influences are, no doubt, to be seen here in the storm that hunts the Alexandrian vessel to its wreck. We must distinguish, of course, carefully, between that worldly prosperity into which, through all the assaults upon it the church was steadily rising, and the spiritual wreck to which in this very way it was going on; until under, Constantine its pilgrim and heavenly character was exchanged for an opposite one; and the gospel of grace, except perhaps with a few hidden and hunted men, was well nigh gone from the earth. We have the creed of these orthodox Nicene days, and the faith of their most eminent men in various expressions, and we know with exactness what they held and taught; their doctrine as to Christ, in general orthodox enough,-as to the gospel, what the extremest ritualism may permit of it:baptism to wash away past sins, and make children of God; penance and priestly absolution, to take away sins afterward ; helped, and needing to be helped, by the virtues of the saints, and even their dead bones ! That was for the people of ordinary lives; but the religious life, which alone made saints, was to be found in following out what Scripture calls "the doctrines of demons, . . . forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth " (i Tim. 4:1-3). This life too was to be spent in deserts, or between monastery or convent walls, and then might attain merit which would help to save other people,-the merit of doing more than it is one's duty to do.

If Scripture in hand we place ourselves in the midst of that flourishing church of the Nicene period, which the hand of Constantine has just liberated from the dungeon to put it upon the throne,-and
look at it with the eyes of him who said to the Corinthians, "Now ye are full, now ye are rich, ye have reigned as kings without us" (i Cor. 4:8), we shall no doubt see that, spite of all the seeming prosperity, there has been in fact a change and a loss, such as would imply no less than a shipwreck;, while the "honey"of nature's sweetness enjoyed might make a Melita for the released sufferers. Into the details of the fourteen days of storm and drift it is harder to enter by way of exposition. The lack of food we can understand, while yet the wheat was in the ship; the fact of the safety of the voyagers depending upon that Paul whom yet they knew so little; his voice being heard once more as the storm works on to imminent disaster:surely ears must have been opened to hear it! The shore was won, though the ship had gone to pieces; there was a pause in the progress towards Rome, and a new ship must be found to get there, though of the same Egyptian, Alexandrian build; and then by easier stages, and with fairer weather the end will soon be reached.
2. The incidents of Paul's stay at Malta have all one character. They show us how the favor of the islanders was won by the display of divine power acting through him in the setting aside of what was in fact the power of the enemy, but in their minds divine, and in the relief of human suffering. The chief man receives and entertains all Paul's company. The bearing of all this upon the allegorical meaning is as plain as need be. If we have indeed arrived at that period in the Church's history when Christianity became the religion of the empire, and the emperor its official head,-when in the thoughts of men it had reached the land of milk and honey, which by the application to themselves of Jewish prophecies they could believe also to be their land of promise, then there is little difficulty in what is before us now. The very acceptance of this new head changed everything, however much the old forms might be maintained, and declared to all who had heart to understand the wreck of all true church principle. It was decisive enough that the first who took this place of ecclesiastical head was a man unconverted, and (what was still more decisive according to the doctrines of the day) unbaptized ; baptized at last by a denier of the deity of Christ; the slayer also of his son and of his wife. They had afterwards to invent the fiction of the bath of Constantine to cover what was ecclesiastically the sorest disgrace. Yes, the ship was a wreck, but they had reached nevertheless the land of honey, their Melita. By and by a new ship also would be found to carry them to their destination.

Yet had not in fact the serpent's power been overcome when the Pontifex Maximus, the head of heathen power, the head that had so recently and fiercely bit at Christianity, and not in vain, was now itself Christian, and putting down heathenism? According to many since, it was the fulfilment of the Apocalyptic story of the Dragon and the Woman, and the Dragon's being cast out of heaven. Was it not indeed a good that in the seat of widest earthly power the malignant forces of evil should be dispossessed by the healing and life-giving influences of heaven's sweetest grace? That is what captivates the people of Melita, who see the viper harmless and cast into the fire, and presently experience the mercy of God in the undeniable signs of divine working. Who can deny the blessings thus coming in through that wonderful change which we have been contemplating? So Paul is in the house of Publius, and the new ship is laden with things which are the thankful acknowledgment of benefits received. Yet is Paul after all a prisoner still, and the vessel's head, at much less distance than before, is pointing towards Rome!

So again we have a ship of Alexandria, and the fresh start is but a continuation of the former voyage. The vessel went under the sign of the Dioscuri, the "sons of Jupiter," Castor and Pollux, the patron divinities of sailors. Perhaps we may interpret this as showing what is certainly true, that while Jupiter himself may have passed away, the ideas born of heathenism remain to preside over the course of the state-church. The very title of Pontifex Maximus to which reference has been made, was retained by the Christian emperors for some time, and when dropped by them was revived, and at the present time is borne by the pope! It carried with it the claim of chief authority in matters of religion, and it is intended to announce this claim today.

At Syracuse they land and tarry for three days. Syracuse means "dragging unwillingly," and speaks sufficiently of the exercise of arbitrary power; which Rhegium, a "forcing the way through," intensifies. It is singular at least, that here the Dioscuri, who presided over the vessel's course, were again the patron-divinities. Puteoli ends the voyage, and takes its name from the thirty-three mineral "wells " that were there, or else from their ill-odor. Puteoli was the chief harbor of Rome, although some distance from the city. Here they found brethren, with whom at their solicitation Paul was able to stay seven days'; "and so we came to Rome." The market place and the taverns complete the journey -morally, as in fact; though here also we have the meeting of the apostle with the Roman brethren.

In all this the tracing of historical fulfilment may be little detailed, but the general character of the period between the state-church and the church-state is sufficiently shown. Violence, breach of faith, pretentious assumption, characterize it; the mal-odorous wells (of error introduced) bring us nearly to Rome itself, though the traffic of the market and the dissipation of the tavern are needed touches to the picture. Even here Paul's heart is cheered as he looks upon the brethren; and prisoner as he is, he thanks God and takes courage. This is always the style of God's precious book:His "I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee," rings throughout it. The head hung down means only unbelief, and it is not in this way that Paul enters the miscalled "eternal city." All things that are seen are temporal; "things which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, God hath revealed unto us by His Spirit."
F. W. G.

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Volume HAF19

A Prophecy Of Spring.

Song of Songs 2:8-13.

The voice of my Beloved !
His shout of joy I hear !
Behold, behold, He cometh !
Behold, He draweth near !

He leaps upon the mountains !
He skips upon the hills !
He swiftly draweth nearer !
My bosom throbs and thrills !

A roe is my Beloved !
A young hart, bounding, free !
And see! behold, He standeth
Behind our wall-'tis He !

He standeth and He gazeth
In through the windows there,
And through the lattice showeth
Himself-O vision fair !

Thus came my own Beloved-
His shadow did I see;
And as He stood revealed,
Thus spake He unto me:-

'' Rise up, -My love ! take wing, my dove !
My fair one, come away !
The winter's blast-lo, it is past,
The rain is o'er and gone at last,
And spring holds quickening sway !

"On earth, once drear, glad flowers appear,
While nature trills her lay;
The singing bird to song is stirred-
The turtle in our land is heard,
Soft cooing through the day !

"The sap flows free in the fig-tree-
She putteth forth green figs;
The tendrils twine on budding vine-
The air is filled with fragrance fine
From blooming boughs and twigs !
"Arise, my love ! take wing, my dove !

O fair one, fly away !
The winter's blast-lo, it is past,
The rain is o'er and gone at last:
Come, fair one, haste away ! "

F. A.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

Call Them Back.

All Thy people back, O Lord,
As in the early days,
When love was warm and fresh and bright,
When first we knew Thy grace,
When first Thy light broke through our night
And set our hearts ablaze.
Lord, call us back.

Call Thy people back, O Lord,
To that simplicity
Which marked Thy servants long ago;
Our yearning hearts would be
Full satisfied with Thee, although
The world against us be.
Lord, call us back.

From the many paths unmeet
Our wayward feet have trod,
From foolish words, and wilful ways,
Yea, turn us back, O God,
Afresh to taste Thy love and grace,
Else Thou must use Thy rod.
Lord, turn us back.

Call Thy loved ones back, O Lord,
From toilsome paths and steep;
From bearing burdens all Thine own,
Which only make us weep,
The while we moan, and toil alone,
And only sorrow reap.
Lord, call us back.

Call us back from hearts cast down,
And oh, afresh inspire
Our souls to seek Thee more and more;
To burn with deep desire,
Till hearts overflow, and faces glow
With holy, ardent fire.
Lord, call us back.

Call us back to those sweet days,
When hearts were knit as one,
When prayer was as the breath of life;
Ere we were so undone,
Ere souls were rife with endless strife;
For Jesus' sake, Thy Son, Lord, call us back.

Broken is the remnant, Lord,
And difficult the day;
What shame and sorrow cover us,
Our tears oft dim the way;
The tide runs high, Thy coming's nigh,
Our hearts are loath to stay.
Lord, take us home.

H. McD.

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF19

Jonah The Prophet. II. The Testimony Of Resurrection

(Chap. 1:17-3:2.)

That God is the God of resurrection, is a testimony which seems exclusively that of the earth. We have it at the very beginning. "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth," and the next thing we find is the earth (but not the heavens) "without form and void," (or waste and desolate, ) and "darkness on the face of the deep. " Thus if this is the picture, as it surely is, of a lapsed condition, – for " He created it not a waste " (Isa. 45:1 8, R. V.) – the very ground upon which we tread is a witness to the fact of resurrection. The earth coming up out of the waters on the third day contained within itself, even to the tops of the highest mountains, the evidence of former life, of forms stages of existence passed away, but now in a higher form renewed. Resurrection lies, as we may say, at the foundation of things here.

Again, when God said:"Let there be light and there was light," we are told that "the evening and the morning were the first day." That is the Scripture order, and it has evidently meaning in it. To a spectator upon the earth at that time, the light that appeared at the bidding of God would seem at once to decline and pass into extinction. Yet, as we know, the true "morning" was that which was to follow it. Resurrection thus puts its stamp upon every day's work after.

The seasons manifest the same thing. Autumn passes into winter, in which life becomes comparatively extinct, but to yield once more to summer with all its fulness of life.

Thus it was from the beginning, the witness abiding to this day, and the history of man ever since has repeated that God is still the God of resurrection. Especially in those in nearest relation to God, where one might expect it most, is this manifest. Take Abraham:he who had the promise, '' In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed," had yet to see himself a childless man as to the real fulfilment of that promise, until his body was now dead; and not till then was he born in whom the seed was to be " called."And so '' there sprang of one, and him as good as dead, so many as the stars of heaven in multitude, and as the sand which is by the seashore, innumerable."Israel again has to go down into Egypt, as it were ceasing to be a nation before it had fairly multiplied into one. Egypt might have seemed to be its tomb, but out of this in due time God summoned it to a new existence.

The lesson of resurrection is, as we know, above all to be found in this history of Jonah. It was a lesson that he had himself to learn, and to learn it before he was morally competent to be a witness to others. Jonah in the belly of the great fish speaks of himself, as well he might, as in the "belly of hell" (or hades,) a man gone out of living existence in the world. But this was only God's way of doing a necessary work in him and preparing him for that which was, after all, his mission. As a type of Israel, he speaks distinctly to us. Israel has gone out of existence, as it were, swallowed up by Daniel's monster from the sea, and learning in her long waiting time what man is before God. She is to have the sentence of death in herself that she may not trust in herself, but in God who raiseth the dead; and thus the "picture of her restoration at the end, as we find it, for instance, in the thirty-seventh of Ezekiel, is a picture of resurrection. , Her hope is gone; her very bones, to use the language there, are dry; but God's word remains:"Behold, O my people, I will open your graves and cause you to come up out of your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel; and ye shall know that I am Lord." That is the lesson of resurrection. To know the Lord, we have to know, first of all, ourselves. We have to realize the condition of a creature upon whom death has put its stamp, the stamp of a fallen being, that thus we may find a life which is of God alone, and learn His power and His grace aright. Through all her past, in her condition, hitherto, a stranger to her own need, and so to divine grace, Israel was as yet unable to fulfil her mission to the world. God indeed, as we know, raised up in her midst those who could be the channels of His communications to others, and we are all witnesses today of what we have in this way gained through her; but for the nation itself, built up in self-righteousness, and turning the privileges which God had accorded her into mere evil and a curse through her abuse of them, there was no remedy. Death had to pass upon her. Governmentally, she has to pay to the "uttermost farthing" for her sins, only at last, however, to find a mercy which rejoiceth against judgment, to hear the voice of redeeming love, and learn the goodness of Him against whom she has rebelled. Then will she be the messenger of that grace to others, and, repentant herself, she will lead the nations to repentance.

This is plainly the lesson of the whole book of Jonah. It is striking how the prophet's prayer in the fish's belly is almost a repetition of her voice in the Psalms, witness as they are all through of just these times of trial that are in store for her, those pangs of suffering by which she is to come to her new birth as a nation, when, cast out, as it might seem, out of Jehovah's sight, they look again towards His holy temple. How little they had realized that wondrous privilege which had been there accorded them, and in which the heart of God had disclosed itself,-in God's dwelling place amongst men, and which is to be His witness yet in millennial time when that house shall be indeed a "house of prayer for all nations," when "the mountain of the Lord's house shall be established in the top of the mountains and be exalted above the hills, and all nations shall flow unto it." This was the house to which the Lord came, the Messenger of the covenant according to the promise (Mal. 3:i), and would then have purified it, that there might be '' offered to the Lord an offering in righteousness;" but they had no ears and no heart for Him. Thus their house was left unto them desolate, and they shall see Him no more until they shall say:"Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord."

But this leads to the second view of what Jonah here presents, for the sign of the prophet Jonas, such a sign as he was to the Ninevites, is yet to be given to the nation itself. '' An evil and adulterous generation," says the Lord, "seeketh after a sign, and there shall no sign be given to it but the sign of the prophet Jonas; for as Jonas was three day and three nights in the whale's (or fish's) belly, so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth. The men of Nineveh shall rise in judgment with this generation and shall condemn it, because they repented at the preaching of Jonas, and behold a greater than Jonas is here" (Matt. 12:39-41). Here, "the sign of the prophet Jonas" refers, of course, to the miracle of his restoration, as it were, out of death itself. One can easily see that what wrought repentance among the Ninevites their consciousness that here was, as it were, the testimony of a dead and risen man. The sacrifice and vows offered to the Lord by the Gentile mariners would have carried far and wide the report of his death under judgment from God because of the refusal of his mission to them, and here was the same man risen up out of death with his mission renewed. How could they resist this mighty God ? Here, plainly, was the sign or miracle that spoke with conviction to the hearts of men in the great city; but the nation itself shall have the sign of One dead and risen, and now the Son of man in heaven (Matt. 24:30) ; the sign being Himself, coming in the clouds of heaven, once crucified, now glorified, and which is compared to the lightning-flash of threatening judgment (Luke 17:24), a greater than Jonah indeed. The lesson of resurrection, – not a message of judgment only, but with abundant mercy also for those upon whom is poured "the spirit of grace and of supplications " when they look upon Him whom they have pierced and mourn for Him as one that mourneth for his only son and are in bitterness for him as one who is in bitterness for his first-born (Zech. 12:10). For that resurrection sign is what we know also as the justification of all that believe in Him, a justification which His death has wrought out for us, but which His resurrection publishes as good news for all that will receive it.

Christ is Himself here, as in many of the prophecies, the true Israel, entering into all the deep reality of that judgment upon sin which they have as a lesson to learn, which through Him alone can they have profit in the learning. Here Jonah becomes, as we see, a double type. Two histories run necessarily together, and the Lord's words in application to Himself are not an arbitrary application, but give us the full depth of the meaning here. For Him who has stood for Israel, under Israel's penalty, the word is uttered further:'' Thou art My servant, O Israel, in whom I will be glorified" (Isa. 49:3). See how the divine Voice answers the complaint of the One so addressed in the verses that follow, assuring Him that He was formed from the womb to bring Jacob again to Him; that not only should He be the Restorer of the preserved of Israel, but also for a Light to the Gentiles that He might be God's salvation unto the end of the earth.

Thus, then, in a double way have we the lesson of resurrection here. For ourselves as Christians now, these two lessons are indeed united. The objective and the subjective, as one may say, come together. What we find for our souls in Christ dead and risen, we learn in faith to make our own, as dead and risen with Him. We accept the sentence upon man as man, which must be accepted for all real deliverance. We accept the setting aside of all man's pretension to goodness or to strength, and the sign of the Son of man in heaven speaks to us of how truly nothing else is left for us to glory in but the Lord Himself. But here all the glory of God in the face of Him who abides in His presence for us, in whose cross we have found at once our judgment and our salvation, and whose glory revealed, is that by which, as delivered from ourselves, we are "changed, into the same image from glory to glory."

The lesson of Jonah is thus of central importance for our blessing, as for Israel's blessing, at all time. There is no other way. For all who have accepted it, the billows and the waves of wrath that once passed over them are gone forever, and the dry ground, yea, the Rock of our salvation, is under the feet of the delivered man. Crucified with Christ,- " our old man " crucified,-all confidence in the flesh buried in His grave, to know no resurrection,-He alone remains to glory in, whose glory has shone out in the wonder of an unspeakable humiliation. And here is the One in whom we are:our history and His have come together; the stamp of death is removed and replaced by that of resurrection:raised with Christ, we are "created in Christ Jesus," and "if any man be in Christ, it is new creation:old things are passed away; behold, all things have become new." F. W. G.

(To be continued.)

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

The Epistle Of Jacob.

There are probably many who do not recognize the fact that there is an epistle of Jacob in the New Testament; and even those who are quite aware that James is only a form of the word Jacob, which is the real transcription of the Greek,-may yet fail to attach any particular significance to this. Alas! we so commonly read Scripture without even imagining that there is significance everywhere-in a proper name as in everything else-that it probably strikes few, although one would think it plain enough, that there is any particular meaning in this. Yet one can see at once that there is a peculiarity of the epistle with which this harmonizes in a very complete way. It is an epistle to "the twelve tribes scattered abroad." There is no other epistle in the New Testament which recognizes Israel after this manner. In fact, we rightly think of it as in a sense foreign to Christianity to do so. We know that God has promises for Israel which will be fulfilled in a day soon to come:but in the meanwhile the branches are broken off:Israel as a nation is set aside in order that God may fulfil His purpose of taking for Himself a heavenly people out of the world, a people formed of Jews and Gentiles, brought together upon equal terms, and with higher promises than Israel's ever were.

Yet a glance at the book of the Acts is sufficient to assure us how long was the weaning time before those that believed in Israel were content absolutely to separate themselves from the nation to which they belonged. When Paul arrived at Jerusalem, the last time of his being there, it was to find myriads of Jews believing; who, as he was told, were "all zealous of the law."And we know how he was urged himself to go with those who were offering sacrifices at the close of a legal vow, in order to assure every one that he walked orderly and kept the law. It had been indeed allowed that believing Gentiles were not under it. God has made it amply plain; and that is why in the letter with regard to it, with which James himself had prominently to do, it is said:" It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us."This has been taken as if it meant really the Holy Spirit in us, but it is surely not so. We have but to remember how, apart from law, apart from ritual even of every kind, baptism itself displaced from the order which it had among the Jewish converts, the Spirit of God fell upon Cornelius and those with him, while yet they were listening to Peter's word, and Peter distinctly refers to this when questioned at Jerusalem as to how he could go in unto men uncircumcised, and eat with them, when he asks :"Who was I that I could resist God ?"

But this acceptance of Gentiles as Gentiles did not necessarily displace the Jews from their position, a position as the favored family of God. In millennial days, Gentiles will be owned as Gentiles, while at the same time Israel will have their own special place and eminence upon the earth. It was not until after this, and some years afterward, that Paul was chosen to write his epistle to the Hebrews and to bid believers among them to come outside the camp and give up the whole Jewish position. It is in this meantime that the epistle of James evidently has its place. While he, of course, distinctly takes his place as a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, and while he writes as to those who had the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, yet they are part of the twelve tribes. Peter also, the apostle of the circumcision, as he distinctly was, writes to the "strangers scattered abroad," or the "strangers of the dispersion," manifestly Jews; but he does not address them, after all, as being such, and in his epistle we see distinctly recognized the position of Christians as living stones built upon that Living Stone which Israel's builders had rejected, and thus built up a "spiritual house, a holy priesthood,"-the complete setting aside of the Levitical one. Peter refers also to the epistle which Paul had written to them, "according to the wisdom given him;" and this is evidently that epistle to the Hebrews which is often denied to be his; but no one can find that other epistle which he wrote, and which Peter expressly puts along with the other Scriptures, while he owns there are in it things "hard to be understood." The complete set-ting aside of the whole Jewish ritual would be necessarily hard enough to be understood by Jewish believers.

With James there is nothing of this kind. He raises no question indeed as to it, and the whole style of his epistle shows the character of things still obtaining among those he addresses. Thus the word for " assembly " in the second chapter is really "synagogue;" which must be intended to have some meaning for us; the only synagogue that we hear of amongst Christians being that which the Lord speaks of in the epistle to Smyrna as the "Synagogue of Satan."

The synagogue exactly showed the Jewish position. With children of God among them, the children of God as such were still scattered abroad. There no distinct gathering together of believers as such; though they might have and did have, no doubt, their separate meetings, yet they were rather a "sect of the Nazarenes" than a distinct body. The apostle here addresses those who were evidently still in that mixed condition. He speaks as in the synagogue. He addresses himself to the rich whose riches are corrupted and whose garments are moth eaten, who have even condemned and killed the just, -to denounce upon them the miseries that would come upon them. He speaks of their wars and fightings, of their killing and desiring to have, their fighting and warring in order to satisfy what was mere fleshly lust. All this is perfectly consistent with what Paul himself might have said when standing in those synagogues, which, as we know, he sought out in the first place to deliver his message there. By and by when they oppose themselves, he shakes his garments, and separates the disciples from them; but to this he is forced, He does not take the ground of separation from the beginning, and if this were so even with Paul at that time, we need not wonder if it were so with James and those gathered within the nation, as in Jerusalem.

All this does not hinder in the least the application of the truth given in the epistle, to believers everywhere. It is evident that it is practice rather than doctrine upon which he dwells; and while it is in the wisdom of God, no doubt, that we should have in the New Testament itself the proof of that intermediate condition between Judaism and Christianity, at least as we find it in Paul, (a condition which obtained for many years,) yet we may be sure that He would not allow this to detract from the blessing that we shall find in this epistle to the twelve tribes.

When we think once more of the name of him who addresses them, there certainly seems a suitability in it that we cannot but recognize. An epistle of Jacob to the twelve tribes ! Is it not as if it were the spirit of their ancestor speaking to them in it? And when we look closely, we shall find that this is truly the case. It is, as it were, the Jacob of the old history that is speaking in it; but a Jacob with his lesson learnt, or he would have really no title to speak at all. It is a Jacob of whom God has made an Israel, while all the more he remembers his old name, and is careful to show how God has wrought in him through the trials which have wrought to make him what he is,-such trials as he calls those whom he addresses to rejoice in, with an assurance of how blessed he is who endures them.

It is not necessary to do more than allude to that history of his so familiar to us all, and which the book of Genesis sets before us. Jacob-Israel is the very pattern of the Spirit's work amongst men. Jacob the supplanter, the man seeking constantly to attain by his own effort, even if he were seeking the blessing which we know he did seek, and which, moreover, God designed for him. With his efforts he only succeeds in putting off from himself that blessing for long years; and in making, as far as could be, the God who was for him to be against him. So that, if after all God will bless, for this He must take him into His own hands, wrestle with him, break down the strength with which he would contend against Him, make it impossible for him to wrestle any more, in order that just in this way he may find that which he has sought, not as wrestling, but as clinging.

The man with the dislocated thigh can only cling, not wrestle; and the laying hold with the hand, of which he is so fond, yet now assumes another character altogether. " I will not let thee go except thou bless me," is such a cry of need as God delights to answer, and such a faith as He is seeking to bring men to. Thus it should be no wonder to us that James' epistle here everywhere dwells upon faith. It may seem, indeed, to many almost the opposite of this. We are familiar with the labor that has been spent to assure us how James, if he be not against Paul's doctrine of justifying faith, as even Luther thought, yet at least is bent upon explaining it in such a way as to guard against the abuse of it. If Paul assures us that Abraham was justified by faith, James, on the other hand, assures us that he was justified by works no less. He puts it as an undoubted fact to which he can appeal:"Was not Abraham our father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son upon the altar ? Ye see, then, how that by works a man is justified and not by faith only."

Yet one who reads carefully, and who knows clearly the gospel and his own need, will scarcely make a mistake here. Paul has left room, in fact, for the very doctrine of James, while guarding his own in the most absolute way. "For if," he says, "Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but, he adds, "not before god." He does not say that Abraham was not justified by works, but he does say in the most positive and absolute way that can be, "not before God."

In what other way, then? some may ask. It should perfectly manifest that, if it be not before God, must be before man; and that is what James speaks of here throughout. "A man may say, thou last faith and I have works. Show me thy faith without thy works and I will show thee my faith by my works."The man who shows himself a believer by his works justifies his faith, justifies himself as having it; and that is how James speaks with regard to Abraham. When was Abraham justified by faith? As we know, when, as a childless man, he stood under the starry heavens to have God say to him:"So shall thy seed be."It is there that we have the record :" He believed God, and it was counted to him for righteousness." But, says James, "Abraham was justified by works when he offered up Isaac his son upon the altar." It was then that Scripture was fulfilled which saith:"Abraham believed God." In that wonderful act, his faith was fully manifested. We see how real it was and how operative, for James does indeed tell us that the faith which is not operative is not a living faith; and only a living faith can save. That is not to dishonor faith or to make less of it in any wise, to say that it has of necessity this character of a power that works; as John also tells us, that it is "faith" that "worketh by love."He does not put down these works of Abraham as having to do with his justification before God; or as being needed a tall for God to pronounce upon his faith. On the other hand, for man they are surely needed.

And the works of which James speaks, let us notice, are not such as people would supplement the righteousness of faith with. They are not works of benevolence; they are not works which necessarily make much of the person at all. Thus James can put " Rahab the harlot" along with Abraham in this matter. The very way in which James introduces her here as "Rahab the harlot" may assure us that it is not of what people call "moral works" that he is speaking. Rahab was justified by works when she had received the messengers and sent them out another way. These were works that made her faith plain, and that is the kind of work that he is seeking. They involved what men would call the betrayal of her country, and which could only be rescued from the charge by the faith in her which recognized God in those messengers who had come to her, and bowed in them to the will of God.

Thus it is faith all through that, in fact, James is dwelling upon. Faith is the great worker, as Jacob his father found it, and thus he rejoices, and would have others rejoice, when they " fall into divers trials, "as knowing this, that "the frying of your faith worketh patience." And how much is involved in this! "Let patience have her perfect work," and you are "perfect and entire, wanting nothing." Is it not the moral of Jacob's history? Is it not the man so fond of putting forth his hand, after his own fashion, broken down from all the self-confidence of his own efforts, to find that after all it is "

Man's weakness waiting upon God
Its end can never miss."

That is why our Jacob here makes so much of faith and makes so much of patience too,-makes therefore so much of the trial which works patience,- the breaking down of human strength and human wisdom with all its sinuous energy, which, after all,, left him only to be the "worm Jacob," as God calls him. How this winding of human wisdom, of which men make so much, is like the effort of the poor wriggling worm! How simple and blessed and suited to us this, that, when we have once got down to the prostration of this energy, God is ready for us with all the grace that is His:to give much more than we sought to take, to bless us beyond any conception that we ever had of Him!

Everywhere we shall find that James is holding up before us faith,-that which in itself speaks of the abandonment of all confidence in self,-of all mere human resources,-to turn to One who is absolutely sufficient, and who is absolutely for us. How simple it should be, now that we have Christ, that this is true! How blessed to have in His cross the judgment of man in every way that is natural to him, the setting aside of the old man altogether, in order that we may put on the new man, which is but the man in Christ:the man standing in an excellence which is not his own, and in a power which is divine,-power made perfect in weakness! How well, therefore, we may be set to learn the lesson of James' epistle! How profitable we shall find it just simply to recognize that "if patience have her perfect work," we shall be "perfect and entire, wanting nothing! "

If we could be only sure of this, how simple a thing, one would say, patience would be; but thus the trial which works this detects in us, in fact, the little faith we have. After all that God has done for us, when the triumphant challenge of our hearts should be:"He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things ? " yet how much we can believe in the excellency of our own wisdom, and in the sweetness of our own wills ! How we strive with God, in short; only to receive by it all, and through His very grace to us, a crippled joint as the memorial of our striving! How many are the troubles that we bring upon ourselves; and in which, too, instead of counting the trials joy, we murmur against God because of it ! How few, perhaps, are the works in our lives which James would put into his class of works,-those that are excellent just because of the faith that is in them ! How we stagger when the faith which we accept joyfully as all that is needed for salvation is required to be manifested in our lives, in some practical way, which (as we put it,) must cost us something ! How well may we take up just these opening verses of the epistle of Jacob, and read, and read them, praying God to stamp them upon our hearts, and to make us know the blessedness of a faith, which, after all, we have in the end to come to,-a faith that in the wreck of all self-confidence trusts God for all things, and finds it no mistake!
F. W. G.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

Two Things.

Two things ought ever to characterize us:a people given to much earnest prayer continually, and with this a keen relish for the word of God. Here is where God begins to work, with ourselves, and creates deeper longings after what is real and divine. Then the heart expands and goes out in those desires for others, and we become a hearty evangelistic people. "My presence shall go with you, and I will give you rest." These were His words to Moses for Israel of old, and He is the same to-day. He brings His people out of Egypt, then through the wilderness; then into the land; and this God is our God.

How much we owe Him until we see Him face to face ! From us there ought to be a double line of service and ministry, as in Col. i 23-25. Ministry first in the gospel, flowing out without stint to needy sinners around us. And then ministry continually flowing out to those who are saved and gathered by the gospel into the Church, the body of Christ. This double stream of ministry flowing through us, is the fruit of communion, and of the truth held with us in even balance. A. E. B.

  Author: Albert E. Booth         Publication: Volume HAF19

Prophesying With Harps.

(1 Chron. 25:1.)

What a wonderful contrast there is between the David of first Kings and of Chronicles,-a thing which has often been noticed as a difficulty by the devout and with but ill concealed triumph by the unbeliever, who delights to find contradictions where faith always finds perfection.

If we remember that the subjects are different, the difficulty vanishes. We see David according to nature in Kings; in Chronicles, according to grace. Indeed, the decrepit old man flashes forth in all the vigor and energy of faith even in Kings when that faith is called into exercise. The one to whom Abishag ministered, seeking almost in vain to keep the spark of life from going out utterly, blazes forth as much the king and man of might as ever when Solomon's title to the throne is disputed by Adonijah, and then and there secures for him the throne and the succession, as well as provides for judgment upon covert enemies who had long escaped punishment. We might say this gives a glimpse of the David whom we see at full length in Chronicles. Here, nature is left out of sight, and the man of faith, the man after God's own heart, realizing as his end draws near, the glory that awaited his successor, makes full and ample provision not merely for Solomon's own throne, but above all, for the glory and the worship and service of the house of God,-that which was dearest to his heart.

Leave the future out of view, and there is something intensely pathetic in seeing this old man,- who, with all his failings, had lived for God in the main,-gathering gold and treasure in rich abundance for his son to rear the house of God, which he was distinctly forbidden to do himself. There is not a murmur, not a question of divine wisdom. He had been a man of blood, not only in the many wars, but no doubt in his inmost heart remembering the blood of Uriah upon his hands, he realized the wisdom of God in reserving for the peaceable and glorious reign of Solomon the erection of that house which was to be the glory of the nation and the wonder of the world.

David not only provides for the building of the house, as we said, but for the worship of the Levites, the courses of the priests, the porters at the gates and all the details. We can imagine with what keen delight this old man would arrange all; and faith could see, not the bare threshing-floor of Oman the Jebusite, but the stately temple filled with worshiping priests and singing Levites, and over all, the overshadowing glory. And faith could rejoice, though for sight there was nothing. And so it should ever be for us. Sight has nothing to show, but how lively the view which faith opens up!

It is in connection with the ordering of the Levite service of worship that we have an expression which should arrest the attention:'' Moreover, David and the captains of the host separated to the service of the sons of Asaph and of Heman and of Jeduthun, who should prophesy with harps."We would naturally think of harps being used to play upon to aid in the melody of the worship, but there seems to be distinct meaning, as we know there is in every word of Scripture,-in this word "prophesy."They were to prophesy with harps; that is, they were to speak for God, which is really the thought of prophesying. And does it not seem a strange combination, the harp suggesting praise, worship, and joy offered to God; the prophesying suggesting, as it were, God's voice for His people to hear, too? Without doubt, the thought that underlies it, first of all, is that their playing with harps was not a natural exercise, but under divine guidance. As the incense was made according to the formula given to Moses, and nothing could be added or taken from it, so the melody which was to accompany the sweet psalms of praise was also ordered of God. This, of course, does not set aside the thought of their being men of gift and of training, but it reminds us of the fact that everything connected with God must be under His control.

. We have another suggestive mention of an instrument of music in connection with the exercise of prophecy in the life of Elisha – when the kings of Judah and Israel and Edom were stranded in the wilderness without water, and the enemy threatening them – in their helplessness they turned to the prophet of the Lord, who, for the sake of Jehoshaphat came to their relief. "Bring me a minstrel," he said, " and it came to pass when the minstrel played, that the hand of the Lord came upon him." It was in connection with what we might call praise, that God gave His word of deliverance for these kings.

This opens up a very suggestive thought for us and one which we forget all too easily. Nothing is more needed amongst the people of God than prophecy. What would we be without God's word for us? Of course, we have the written Word, that which embodies all the truth of God revealed to us, and which it is at once our privilege and responsibility to feed upon and to be filled with. But the word in season, the word from the Lord out of His written Word, that which appeals to conscience and to heart, as the apostle says, which ministers edification, exhortation or comfort,-how important, how necessary to receive this!

If we turn to the Old Testament prophets, we see that their message consisted largely of warning, of denunciation of evil, of lamentation over the declension of a people privileged as nation never was. The pages of the prophets are stained with their tears, and yet who that has read, " Isaiah's wild measure " but has heard the sound of the harp mingling its melody even when the theme was most sad, and sending a glimmer of hope over the darkest pages, while predominating, rising above, reaching beyond all the gloom, is that clear, triumphant note of victory which looks on to the end, assured that at the last the harps will have not a message of sorrow, but one of unmingled joy and delight.

Putting it very simply, the thought suggested by the harps is the spirit of praise, of worship. Even our sins ought to be sung out to God, as it were. The book of Psalms as a whole gives us this thought. No matter how humbling the sin, how deep the humiliation, how sore the oppression of the enemy, the harp is never laid aside. It all goes up, as it were, to God, in worship. And is there not deep instruction in this? None are more easily discouraged than the people of God, particularly when their failures are brought to remembrance. They are overwhelmed. Mere calling sin to mind will never give deliverance from it; but here comes in the harp of praise too; for in spite of all weakness and manifold shortcomings, how much we have to praise for!

There is lacking amongst us, no doubt, much of that faithfulness which marked the prophets of old. "He that hath My word, let him speak My word faithfully " is too easily forgotten, and while we do not prophesy "smooth things of deceit," there may be the passing over, the forgetting those painful "wounds of a friend" which heal while they smite. This is included in the exhortation that the apostle speaks of in the fourteenth chapter of first Corinthians. We must deal faithfully with one another, and we may all prophesy. But let us always take our harp when we prophesy. Let us always remember that we can praise God and that the accompaniment to the saddest message which we may have to bring to our brethren is the sweet song of redemption. Oh, how this illumines whatever may have to be said! How it changes denunciation into entreaty! How anger is melted to tears, and even over those who have gone farthest astray, how the yearning pity mingles with the faith to count upon their recovery as we deliver, it may be, a message of sorrow!

In quite another connection we have a similar thought. " Be careful for nothing," says the apostle, "but in everything by prayer and supplication"- here is the sense of need, the supplication suggesting strong entreaty of hearts that must have an answer from God, and yet coupled with it is that "thanksgiving" which lightens the burden and, in anticipation, praises God for the answer. Do we always remember to mingle thanks with our prayers, as we wait long for the answer, as it is deferred until the heart well nigh grows sick? Let us remember the thanksgiving, for our God does hear and will in His own way and time give an answer of peace. Meanwhile, too, the peace of God which passeth. "all understanding, keeps the heart through Christ Jesus. We have been speaking of admonition. In our usual version, this is connected, in Colossians, with psalms and hymns:"Teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord." Be the punctuation altered as it may, the close connection between the admonition and the psalms and hymns is, to say the least, suggestive, and reminds us of the prophesying with the harp. Nay, in our own experience, have we not oftentimes received the tenderest and most effectual admonitions in the melody of praise ?

"Yet, gracious Lord, when we reflect
How apt to turn the eye from Thee,
Forget Thee, too, with sad neglect
And listen to the enemy,
And yet to find Thee still the same,
'Tis this that humbles us with shame."

It seems as though the very joy of God's grace," instead of making us forget our own wrong, but emphasizes it, leaving us, however, not hopeless and discouraged, but

" Astonished at Thy feet we fall.
Thy love exceeds our highest thought.
Henceforth be Thou our all in all,
Thou who our souls with blood hast bought.
May we henceforth more faithful prove
And ne'er forget Thy ceaseless love."

This is but one illustration of what, without doubt, has been frequently the experience of God's beloved people. Have we not often expected a blow, felt that we deserved it, that nothing short of some correction from the rod of God could move us, and been surprised and melted into deepest contrition by the sweet voice of the harp bringing that message of love, that love which never changes, which is as fresh in our dullness as in our brightest, happiest moments, which cannot be measured by our apprehension of it, but is its own measure?

Then, too, the one that brings the message, as we were saying, a most needed one of admonition, is also prone to discouragement sometimes, forgetting his own weaknesses as he thinks of those of his brethren. He goes in gloom, with but little hope of seeing results, to do that which is a most unpleasant duty, and he does it faithfully, but in a hard way. He goes away unsuccessful and doubly depressed. How different it might have been had he taken his harp with him and remembered that it is grace alone which restores, as it is grace which saves.

But we must not think that all prophecy is admonition or that every message from God is a word of warning. How far this is from the truth! Has a father nothing but correction for his children? It is the exception, rather than the rule. What happy family is there where admonition is the prevailing atmosphere? It comes with all the greater force because of its comparative rarity. But prophecy goes on always. The Father is always speaking to His children and would use us as His mouth-pieces for His message. Exhortation and comfort as well as edification, are included in it, and how everything is lightened and rendered effective by the spirit of praise! We come with happy hearts and speak to one another for edification, and how different it is when, in a mere perfunctory way we go over truths clear to the mind, but lacking in just that one thing which makes them effective and which the spirit of praise furnishes! Is there not, too often, an atmosphere of depression amongst the people of God? They are looking at one another, and like Joseph's brethren, starving as they look into one another's faces, and yet their Bibles are in their hands, full of most priceless truth. Constraint, the fear of man, occupation with one's brethren,-these things have hindered the free outflow of that which should come in all its simplicity and with all its power. What is the remedy? Take the harp. Strike a few notes. Think of the love of God, of His grace and goodness; think of what redemption is, and how all constraint vanishes! The Spirit of the Lord is free because we are occupied, not with one another, but with Christ, and thus there is the liberty which comes from the Spirit's freedom.

Take again the meeting for prayer. How many heavy hearts come, to the prayer-meeting. Do they go away heavy or light ? It is a libel upon the grace and love of God to carry a heavy heart away from where we have met with Him. He will surely give a word of help and blessing if the eye has been turned to Him; if, in other words, the harp of praise has become the vehicle for the message of prophecy.

But it is needless to enlarge. We have simply -dwelt upon one idea, looking at a few of its many sides. The spirit of praise is absolutely essential. God dwells amid the praises of His people. There can be no sense of His presence without worship, and there can be no true liberty without praise accompanying it. Let us then take a lesson from David's provision. Let us learn more than ever to prophesy with the harp, and to do every thing with thanks giving. How light it would make our lives, and what a foretaste it would give us of that time near at hand, -we know not how near,-when the melody of the harp will sound out in all its entrancing sweetness as we sing:"Unto Him that loveth us, and hath washed us from our sins in His own blood." S. R.

  Author: Samuel Ridout         Publication: Volume HAF19

A Practical Word.

The way to overcome the flesh in our every-day experience is to turn to the Lord when it solicits our attention. By so doing we mortify it. Nothing is so mortifying as not to be recognized, especially when you want recognition. The flesh is always wanting it. When you turn to the Lord He will sustain you and the Spirit will help you. The Spirit is always against the flesh. He is your only power. The world around appeals to the flesh, therefore it is of the utmost importance to keep apart from what would provoke or gratify it. The" Spirit occupies us with Christ and heavenly things, and thus in the power of what is superior, we are carried above what is inferior.

All this involves deep exercise of heart in God's presence. But it is well to be exercised. Exercise promotes spiritual growth in the knowledge of what the flesh is in all its badness and subtle character, and also in the knowledge of what God in grace to us. Thus we are saved from being" puffed up with pride which is so abhorrent to God and so ensnaring and ruinous to us, and kept daily dependent on grace alone. If we yield to the flesh and allow it to overcome us, we shall get a bad conscience. The Spirit of God will be grieved. We get out of communion with God. We lose spiritual power unless we at once turn to God in the confession of what we have allowed. Then the word to help us is, '' If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness."

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

On So-called Divine Healing.

A Letter to one Inquiring as to its scripturalness.

As to the question of "divine healing"-so prominent a theme with many to-day-it seems to me that one verse in Ephesians clears up the whole matter if carefully weighed. I refer to chap. 1:3, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings, in heavenly places in Christ." All the Christian's blessings are spiritual, in contrast to Israel's which were of an earthly character. They are in heavenly places, not in an earthly place in the land of Canaan. This verse furnishes the key to the right use of the Old Testament promises. Every spiritual blessing promised to Israel we can also claim, for all such are ours too, but the temporal blessings are not guaranteed to us at all. Who was more lacking of them than the suffering, persecuted apostles? If God, in His love and mercy, is pleased to grant us such out of His own abundant grace, that is quite another thing.

Therefore the promises of bodily health and healing made to Israel and conditioned upon their obedience to the law, we have nothing to do with, though we may learn from them, as from all else in the word of God. They are temporal blessings vouchsafed to an earthly people.

We need not search the Old Testament Scriptures for the Christian's blessings therefore, as it is not there God has put them. To the New Testament we turn and ask:Is there, from Matthew to Revelation, one promise that believers in this Christian dispensation shall not be sick, or can always be healed if they are, providing they exercise a certain amount of faith? We must answer, Not one. In fact the very contrary is not merely implied, but stated directly.

Timothy was sick-a dyspeptic evidently. Was he commanded to "claim the promises for healing," or to go to some person to be prayed for and anointed, and promised health if he did?" No. The Holy Ghost, writing through Paul, says, "Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's sake and thine often infirmities " (i Tim. 5:23). Would any cavil as to this? It is just as much the word of God as John 3:16 or the fifty-third of Isaiah. Yet it not only ignores the doctrine of "divine healing" but prescribes a suited remedy instead. If similarly troubled try it and see if the Great Physician knows not how to treat the disorders of the body as well as to heal the soul.

In Phil. 2:26, 27, Paul writes of Epaphroditus, "He longed after you all, and was full of heaviness, because that ye had heard he had been sick. For indeed he was sick nigh unto death; but God had mercy on him, and not on him only, but on me also, lest I should have sorrow upon sorrow."

Is there a hint here that this devoted servant of Christ had no business to be sick? Instead of that his raising up is spoken of as a signal act of the mercy of God. Means, may or may not have been used, but the point is neither Paul nor Epaphroditus looked upon the healing as something they had a right to (as people often put it to-day) but simply as "mercy" for which they could joyfully thank God, but could not demand.

Whether Paul's thorn in the flesh was a physical infirmity or not has been questioned, but how else could it be in the flesh ? At any rate the principle is the same. Did he demand its removal ? He prayed thrice that it might be. Then the answer came, not that it would be removed, but, "My grace is sufficient for thee; for my strength is make perfect in weakness." Then he exclaims, " Most gladly, therefore, will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me " (2 Cor. 12:7-9). Is there much glorying in infirmities among those who advocate "divine healing" in our day? Instead of that they generally regard infirmity, weakness, or ill-health as a matter of which to be ashamed, and as evidence of low spirituality, or weak faith. How contemptible the apostle Paul would appear in their eyes if he could come among us again in the infirm and weak condition that often characterized him ! He knew nothing of " opening his mouth and breathing in the resurrection life of the glorified body of Christ, communicated by the Spirit," as I once heard a healing teacher put it. No, he had learned that, " If Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin " (Rom. 8:10, 1st part). And thus he was content to add his groans with those of the groaning creation while waiting for the redemption of the body (vers. 19-24).

The present redemption of the body is quite prominently insisted on by those who advocate the doctrine I am seeking to refute. Paul knew nothing of it. To him it was future, and referred to the time when Christ "shall change our vile body (or, the body of our humiliation) that it may be fashioned like unto His glorious body," etc. (Phil. 3:21).

Of another servant he writes " Trophimus have I left at Miletum sick." I have heard it confidently asserted that Trophimus must have been in a backslidden state or he would certainly have been healed. God does not say so. He was sick and Paul says nothing of his privilege to claim healing, nor did he heal him himself, but left him to learn in the presence of God whatever precious lessons his illness might be intended to convey.

In James 5:14-16 we read, "Is any sick among you? Let him call for the elders of the church; and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord :and the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up; and if he have committed sins, they shall be forgiven him. Confess your faults one to another, and pray one for another that ye may be healed. The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much."

Nothing could be more directly opposed to the entire healing system than this passage; yet, strange to say, it is frequently glibly quoted as though it really supported it. Let us see.

In case of sickness what were they to do ? Call in some brother or sister who is known as a healer, or supposed to be a remarkable person as to faith ? Not at all. " Call for the elders of the church." Is this ever done to-day ? Never! Why ? Because in the present disordered condition of things it is absolutely impossible to find elders of the Church to call in. Man-made elders of one or another sect will not do. God-appointed elders of the Church composed of all believers alone could meet the conditions. Of such we read in Tit. 1:5-9 as also i Tim. 3:i-ii ; but who has authority to ordain them today? Titus had, but Titus is gone. If any one else has, let him show his credentials. The fact is, only an apostle or an apostolic delegate ever had such authority. As we have neither the one nor the other in the Church on earth now, as a logical necessity we have no officially recognized elders either.

Now this consideration should prepare one to expect that the passage in James cannot be fully acted upon today, and a careful examination of the epistle only confirms this. It was God's last word to "the twelve tribes" (chap. 1:i), to whom promises of healing had been given in the Old Testament, and as such it is quite in keeping that it instructs them as to this in the new order of things. James is the bridge between Judaism and Christianity, and to be properly understood must be so looked at; else how can we account for verse 2 of chap, 2:, where the word translated " assembly " is really " synagogue," and has no reference to the properly Christian company whatever.

It is well to remember also that since then the ruin of the Church has come in. All is now in confusion. Hence the power that wrought in the beginning is in great measure withheld now.

If however these considerations do not seem clear, a more important point yet is this. In James 5:no account is taken of the exercise of faith on behalf of the sick one -only of the faith of those who pray for him. Is this true among divine-healers now? Is it not just the opposite with them ? They excuse all their failures to heal, by lack of faith on the part of the patient, which clearly shows that their entire system is different from that referred to here.

If any can act on James 5:, and through their prayers healing be granted the afflicted people of God, we can only wish them God-speed, and doubtless the sixteenth verse is one of wide enough range to apply to all. There is nothing official about it. Tried saints in all ages since the Cross have proved the blessedness of it, but it is no question of faith on the part of the sufferer.

Another misapplied scripture with the healers is Matt. 8:16, 17, "When the even was come they brought unto Him many that were possessed with devils:and He cast out the spirits with His word, and healed all their sick, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaiah the prophet, saying, Himself took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses."

The awful doctrine has been founded on this, that Christ bore on the cross, our sicknesses as well as the judgment due to our sins. I say awful, because this would imply that He was Himself, as I heard a leader among them say on one occasion, " filled with every loathsome disease and a living mass of corruption on the cross." Worse was said which I would not repeat. Alas, how little do such realize the meaning of their Satan-inspired words. " Neither wilt thou suffer thy Holy One to see corruption" was true of that precious, "prepared" Body, in life as well as in death. But in no other way could He have really made atonement for sickness, and if He has so done Christians could no more be sick than be judged for their sins. The passage quoted by Matthew from Isa. 53:does not state this however. It says the fulfilment took place as He healed the sick in the exercise of His gracious ministry on earth, not on the cross. He never healed a person that He did not bear, in His deep sympathies, all that the afflicted one had suffered.

I think it unnecessary to say more. The words of Jesus Himself imply clearly that sick people need a physician (Matt. 9:12) nor does He forbid a human one such as " Luke, the beloved physician " (Col. 4:14). On the other hand, His word is ever true, " If ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will and it shall be clone unto you" (John 15:7). H. A. IRONSIDE.

  Author: Henry Alan Ironside         Publication: Volume HAF19

The Silence Of Jesus.

If at times the voice of Jesus was raised in stirring appeal or majestic command-and we may read sweet lessons from its rousing tones-so also was His silence vocal with unheard music, and the "rests " in the full flood of harmony with which His voice was pregnant are also most beautiful. They read us lessons of the love of God, they witness silently to the majesty of the blessed Christ, they speak of depths unfathomed by the poor plummet of earthly affection and understanding and they rise to the eternal home of the divine Father, and gives us assurance of our entrance there. With this prospectus before us let us seek to follow them out; but oh, brethren, it is no use for you to read, or for me to write, unless through grace His Spirit teach us. "Though I speak with the tongue of men and of angels," says the apostle, "if I have not love, I am as sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal." Who shall describe Christ ? Who can speak of Him aright? and if one of the holiest of men on earth was not worthy to stoop and loose the latchet of His shoe, what are we ?

There are a number of instances in which Jesus kept silence, of which the Gospels speak or at which they hint, and there are circumstances connected with them which are well worthy of meditation. – Of course, they are familiar to most of us, but perhaps it has not yet been the privilege of some to consider them as a whole, and to such the subject should be of interest. There are two aspects of them which we will consider; the one tells us a connected story of what His love accomplishes and when it works; and the other, of Himself personally.

It was near the end of His earthly journey. His disciples had left Him, and His enemies were rejoicing in His downfall. The rulers were taking counsel together, and one of them who for a long time had been desirous to see, because he hoped to have his idle curiosity sated by some work of wonder wrought at Christ's command, now questions Him in many words. He receives no answer. Those lips unsealed so often at the cry of necessity and the voice of anguish to pour out a bounteous blessing are fast locked against the words for empty curiosity, even though a king with his armed band stand to command their undoing,' 'He answered him nothing." How vexatious for proud Herod! Here was a treasure to which no king could command the key, and which self-proud words could not unlock. And this should have its voice for us and for men of all time. It is a divine principle. It is only the heart in earnest whose cry is ever heard. And God is not a respecter of persons. These are principles which meet us upon the threshold of all dealings with God. We may apply them when in prayer we seek His face, when we come to Him for salvation, whenever it be. Be in earnest and humble, or no answer will come.

But if God hear not idle curiosity, do not imagine that you are going to be heard because of any mere earnestness. You cannot storm heaven in that way. You must come in your true relationship.

There are two silences of Jesus which bear witness to this, one of them carrying with it a further lesson which is indeed very blessed.

There was a poor woman who came to Him in great distress about her daughter whom she had left at her home on the sea-coast grievously vexed with a devil. There was no mistake about her being in earnest. Oh, that we all were ever as earnest as she! She was a foreigner, and she cried to Him, "Have mercy on me, O Lord, Thou; Son of David." "But He answered her not a word." This evidently went on for quite a time, until at last the disciples grew wearied, and besought Him, saying," Send her away, for she crieth after us." One can well imagine what a trial it was to our dear Lord thus to put her off, but when it was necessary to teach a lesson He never spared Himself. How quickly are the channels of mercy thrown open when she drops the "Son of David," and takes her true position towards Him. The silence is broken then, and from the Lord's lips break those blessed words of joyous delight:"O woman, great is thy faith; be it unto thee even as thou wilt."

If we have learned now from His silence, and that it had to be broken, that nothing in ourselves but only our outcast condition could give us place at His table, another question arises,'' Will He care for me and shelter me on my journey through this world, spite of all my erring ways ? and a third most beautiful silence of Jesus gives its divine and comforting answer, " He will."

It is night in Judea; a night of sorrow and distress; a night of blasted hopes and scattered friends, and we see our blessed Saviour surrounded by His enemies in the palace of the high-priest. They are asking Him many questions; and also one of His followers, who had sneaked into the palace, and is warming himself by a fire, is saying something. Let us listen a moment. He is cursing and swearing and saying, " I know not the man;" "I know not the man." Is this Peter, the valiant Peter? And who is it he does not know ? "The Christ, the Son of the living God." "I know not the man." "The high-driest then asked Jesus of His disciples and of His doctrine," and from John's Gospel we see that Jesus omits all mention of His disciples. He might have answered " There is one at the fire there, cursing and swearing that he does not know Me." Oh, how terribly sad must have been those curses to the ears of our dear Lord. How much alone He must have felt at such an hour ! Ah! never was sorrow so bitter as His, and yet it did not absorb Him. He thinks of Peter. He does not speak to him, for that would betray him. Peter deserved it a hundredfold, but Jesus loved, and that love, forgetful of its injury, will acquiesce in Peter's wish not to be known as Christ's. In perfect silence Jesus turned, and just looked. We are not told what there was in that silent look, but just as the railing of the thief on the cross was suddenly checked, and turned to entreaty, so curses change to tears. Peter went out weeping bitterly.

And will it be bold and illogical in us to argue that, if thus Christ cared for Peter in his disobedience, forgetting His own deep sorrow and thoughtfully shielding his wayward one, He will likewise shield and care for us ? I think not.

His silence, then, assures us of care through this scene, and if we ask, "What about the hereafter?" we hear a voice saying, " In My Father's house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would have told you." There was no need to speak on such a subject. Fancy one like Christ having to tell His own He had a home for them. Silence was guarantee from Him that there was. Reader, I will not dwell on the last blessed silence of Christ. "Thinkest thou I could not pray to the Father and He would presently give Me more than twelve legions of angels " ? We know what this abstinence meant both to Him and to us. But let us return often to meditate on such themes. They are worthy of it. F. C. G.

  Author: F. C. G.         Publication: Volume HAF19

Extract Of Correspondence.

My loved Brother:

I think I have had my mind more occupied of late than ever with the subject which your letter suggests-the being with the Lord. I am sure it is deeper, happier, fuller acquaintance with Himself that our hearts need; and then we should long and desire after Him in such ways as nothing but His presence could satisfy. It is not knowledge that gives this, but personal acquaintance with the blessed Saviour, through the Holy Ghost.

I alighted, as by chance, the other day on some fervent thoughts of an old writer, in connection with this dear and precious subject. In substance they were as follows, and almost so in terms, only I have somewhat condensed them.

" It is strange that we, who have such continual use of God, and His bounties and mercies, and are so perpetually in obligation to Him, should after all be so little acquainted with Him. And from hence it comes that we are so loath to think of our dissolution, and of our going to God. For, naturally, where we are not acquainted, we like not to hazard our welcome. We would rather spend our money at an inn, then turn in for a free lodging to an unknown host; whereas, to an entire friend, whom we elsewhere have familiarly conversed with, we go boldly and willingly as to our home, knowing that no hour can be unseasonable to such an one. I will not live upon God and His daily bounties, without His acquaintance. By His grace I will not let one day pass without renewing my acquaintance with Him, giving Him some testimony of my love to Him, and getting from Him some sweet pledge of His constant favor towards me."

Beautiful utterance this is. It expresses a character of mind which, in this day of busy inquiry after knowledge, we all need-personal longings after Christ. May the blessed Spirit in us give that direction to our hearts! It is a hard lesson for some of us to learn, to reach enjoyments which lie beyond and above the provisions of nature. We are still prone to know Christ Himself "after the flesh," and to desire to find Him in the midst of the relations and circumstances of human life and there only.

But this is not our calling-this is not the heavenly life. It is hard to get beyond this, I know, but our calling calls us beyond it. We like the home, and the respect, and the security, and all the delights of our human relationships and circumstances, and would have Christ in the midst of them ; but to know Him, and to have Him in such a way as tells us that He is a stranger on earth, and that we are to be strangers with Him, this is a hard saying to our poor fond hearts.

In John's Gospel, I may say, among other things, the Lord sits Himself to teach us this lesson.

The disciples were sorry at the thought of losing Him in the flesh, losing Him in their daily walk and intercourse with Him. But he lets them know that it was expedient for them that they should lose Him in that character, in order that they might know Him through the Holy Ghost, and ere long be with Him in heavenly places (chap. 16:).

And this is again perceived in chap. 20:Mary Magdalene would have known the Lord again, as she had already known Him, but this must not be-this must be denied her. This was painful, but it was expedient, good for her then (just as it had been already good for the disciples in chap. 16:) to know that she was to lose Christ in the flesh. For Mary is now taught that she was to have fellowship with Him in the more blessed place of His ascension.

So also the company at Jerusalem in the same chapter. "They were glad, when they saw the Lord." But this gladness was human. It was the joy of having recovered, as they judged, the One whom they had lost-Christ in the flesh. But their Lord at once calls them away from that communion and knowledge of Him, to the peace which His death had now made for them, and the life which His resurrection had now gained for them.

All this it is healthful for our souls to ponder, for we are prone to be satisfied with another order of things. The sorrow that filled the hearts of the disciples at the thought of their Lord going away-the "Rabboni " of Mary Magdalene-the disciples being "glad when they saw the Lord," show the disposedness of the heart to remain with Christ in the midst of human relationships and circumstances, and not to go with a risen Christ to heavenly places.

But all this I say to you as one that suggests a thought -would that it were the experience of the soul. But I desire to have it so.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19

At The Master's Feet.

Once I went forth to look for Repentance. I sought her day and night in the City of Man-soul. I asked many if they knew where she dwelt, and they said they had never seen her. I met one, grave and scholarly, who told me what she was like, and bade me seek her earnestly; but he did not tell me where she was to be found. Then, all sad at heart, and wearied with my search, I went forth without the city walls, and climbed a lonely hill, and up a steep and rugged way, until I came in sight of the cross of Him who hung thereon. And lo! as I looked upon Him, there came one and touched me. Then instantly my heart was melted, and all the great deeps of my soul were broken up.

"Ah, Repentance, I have been looking everywhere for you," I said.

"Thou wilt always find me here," said Repentance; "here, in sight of my crucified Lord. I tarry ever at His feet."

Again I went forth to look for Forgiveness. I knocked at many a door in the City of Mansoul and asked for her. And some said they thought she did live there sometimes ; and some said she used to once; and some said she came there occasionally. Then up came one whom I knew by name as Unbelief, with a voice like the croaking of a raven, and he said that Forgiveness never was there and never would be; that she was much too fine a lady to live in so low a place as that and among such a set as they were. So I came forth wearied and sad, and as I reached the city gate I met again the grave scholar, and he gave me much account of her birth and parentage, and he showed me her portrait, and told me of her gracious works, and he bade me seek her earnestly, but he did not tell me where I could find her.

So I went along my way, looking, but well-nigh in despair, when it chanced that I found myself again upon the hill, climbing again the steep and rugged path. And I lifted my eyes and saw once more the cross and Him who hung thereon; and lo! at the first sight of my dear Lord, Forgiveness met me, and filled my soul with holy peace and a rest like heaven itself.

"Oh, I have had a weary search for you," I said.

"I am always here," said Forgiveness; "here, at my Master's feet."

Long afterwards, I wondered within myself where Holiness dwelt, but I feared to go in search of her. I thought she would never be at home in the lowlands and busy streets of Mansoul. All whom I asked about her answered doubtfully. One said that she had died long ago; indeed, was buried in Eden before Adam came out.

One said that she lived away at the end of the Valley of the Shadow of Death; her house was on the brink of the river, and that I must hope to meet with her just before I crossed it. Another argued almost angrily against the notion. "Nay," said he, "she lives farther on still; search as thou wilt, thou shalt never find her till thou art safely across the river and landed on the shores of the Celestial City."

Then I remembered how well I had fared aforetime on the Holy Hill, and went forth again. So up the lonely way I went, and reached the top of it and looked once more upon my blessed Saviour. And, . . . lo! there was Holiness sitting at the Master's feet! I feared to say that I had been looking for her, but as I gazed upon the Crucified, and felt the greatness of His love to me, and as all my heart went out in love and adoration, Holiness rose up, and came to me all graciously, and said:

'' I have been waiting for thee ever since thy first coming."

"Waiting where?" I asked, wondering.

"At His feet," said Holiness; "I am always there."

M. G. Pearse.

  Author: M. G. P.         Publication: Volume HAF19

He Refresheth My Soul.

O Lord, Thy gracious hand
In love, but heaviness,
Doth often, and again,
Through sorrow and through pain,
(But with intent to bless,)
Reveal how little like I am
To Christ my Lord, Thy chosen Lamb.

I may not lift mine eyes
To Thee my God, and say
I'm worthy of one thing
Thy grace to me doth bring:-
Thy debtor every day-
Yet, still I plead Thine own sure Word,
Which casts me on Thy mercy, Lord.

O Christ, my heart's resource,
In whom all fulness is-
My Life, my Light, my Joy,
My Peace, my soul's employ,
My only lasting bliss.
To Thee my longing doth aspire;
To Thee, O Lord, is my desire.

How could this beggared world
Have anything to give?
The things my hands would hold
Might cost me pain untold;
My joy in Thee must live,
And so I give them back to Thee
To keep, and sanctify for me.

I know Thou wilt not choose
The heart to be for Thee,
O'er-filled with earthly things;
No heart like this e'er sings
The heavenly melody
It gives Thee joy, O Lord, to hear;
Then let me to Thyself draw near.

Nor wilt Thou choose, my God,
The hands to work for Thee
O'er-filled with earthly fruits,
Whose e'er descending roots
Are drawing constantly
Their sustenance (of nothing worth)
From out a ruined, cursed earth.

Thou canst not satisfy
With Thy sweet whisperings
Th' unconsecrated ear,
That seeks and loves to hear
Unhallowed fleshly things
Which waste away the precious days,
And rob Thee of Thy rightful praise.

Thou'lt follow, but not walk
In close companionship
With those whose wayward feet
Have chosen paths unmeet,
Where they must surely slip.
What joy untold, they wilful lose,
Who thus His blessed paths refuse.

Then mold this vessel frail
With Thine unerring hand;
I dare not undertake,
Lest I might rudely break
Some tender chord or band;
Thou'lt shape it for eternity,
And none may do this work but Thee.

Thus fashioned, Lord, by Thee,
I may not choose the way
Thou'lt seek Thy plant to prune,
Or set my harp in tune
For some sweet melody,
Or wake the new, old song again,
My first love's rapturous refrain.

H. McD.

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF19

Transformation.

Rom. 12:2; 8:29; John 8:32; Rom. 6:2; 8:3; Heb. 9:26; Gal. 2:20; 2 Cor. 3:18.

I Asked the Father, once, to mold
Me to the image of His Son;
But, brooding o'er the matrix cold,
Shrank back before He had begun.

I pleaded that subservient
To His, alone, my will might be;
And here, alas, willed to relent
Ere He His will made known to me.

Resistless marble, next, I sought
To be, and He, the Sculptor rare;
Still, ere creation could be wrought,
Repented was the creature's prayer.

As silver, then, I would be tried,
With Christ in the Refiner's seat;
Yet scarce the test had been applied,
Than quailed I at the glowing heat.

At length, I prayed, "O, Father, show
Why thus, in bondage, I should be."
The answer came, " My child should know
My pledge,' The truth shall make you free.' "

Then to the blessed Book I turned,
Deliverance found from sin's fell sway;
"Sin in the flesh," there fully learned,
The cross "condemned," and "put away;"

And Scripture proved me "dead to sin"-
Thus, by "the truth," was I "made free"-
And should no longer "live therein,"
But live the life of "Christ in me."

So, now, the Word abides in me,
And God the Spirit wields His sword,
That Father's heart and eye may see
The growing image of my Lord.

No need for matrix do I feel,
No thought of crucible recall,
Nor yearns the marble for the steel-
Christ Jesus is my ALL IN ALL.

G. K.

  Author: G. K.         Publication: Volume HAF19

The Assembly Meeting Of I. Cor. 14

Why should the prominent church meeting of the New Testament, (aside from the Lord's supper) have so little place among us? We may call it by way of designation the "Open Meeting," as it has often been called, open for what we may be led to-prayer, praise, ministry, and worship. Ministry being prominent as in i Cor. 14:where one had "a psalm," another "a doctrine," another "an interpretation," and "two or three were to speak and the others to judge;" and all things were to be done "decently and in order." But does not the necessity of giving a name of this kind to this meeting arise from a lack of simplicity and obedience to Scripture? With simplicity and habitual yielding of ourselves to the Spirit's guidance would it not be a common meeting, and need no special designation. What has been allowed to take the place of the proper church-meetings and ministry of Scripture in the Church at large we well know-human devices of many kinds; and prominently "one man ministry." But if these have been rightly refused and escaped from, our tendency is still to return to them. And so it is that the assembly-meeting in which gifts would specially be used and developed, and the body be edified,-this assembly meeting hardly exists among us, unless on special occasion. Ministry we have at the breaking of bread, and in the prayer-meeting and in the reading-meeting, and in the preaching, by which we are blest; but we come short of the meeting in question.

In our low and feeble condition there may seem to be little hope that such a meeting can be sustained, but let us consider briefly the familiar scriptures that refer to it, and then also very briefly the condition we must be in to meet our responsibility. The first scripture we refer to is the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth chapters of first Corinthians ; and the other is Rom. 12:In the chapters in Corinthians we find, first, the many members in the one body spoken of, and their varied offices and activities; and in chap. 13:the "love" (charity) which must be the actuating motive in service; then in the fourteenth chapter an example of an assembly-meeting where members are exercising their gifts. The space devoted to the subject shows its great importance.

" How is it then brethren:when ye come together every one of you hath a psalm, hath a doctrine, hath a tongue, hath a revelation, hath an interpretation? Let all things be done unto edifying." It is true that they are being rebuked for too much activity, but still it was a meeting of the assembly open for any one to minister whom the Lord might lead to do so. Not too many were to speak, only two or three; for love would seek to edify, not to selfishly press oneself upon the meeting.

How gracious of the Lord to commit to us such a sacred responsibility, and what an excellent school of discipline and development for the members of the body; and what a loss not to diligently make use of what God has so provided!

In the twelfth chapter of Romans, the doctrine of our redemption being complete, devotedness is enjoined-the presenting our bodies a living sacrifice to God; and then at once we are exhorted as to our membership and place of service in the body. This puts in a strong light again the importance of what is before us. All the beautiful fruits and excellencies of Christian character that follow in the after part of the chapter, are a development of that devotedness, which begins with a sober estimate of one's gift as a member of the one body.

"Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith; or ministry, let us wait on our ministering; or he that teacheth, on teaching; or he that exhorteth, on exhortation." Then follow those excellent things we are familiar with, that shine like jewels:"Let love be without dissimulation; abhor that which is evil; cleave to that which is good. Be kindly affectioned one to another . . . fervent in spirit; serving the Lord; rejoicing in hope . . . instant in prayer"-and many more. But what precedes it all, as we have seen, is our membership in the one body, and the gifts committed to us in that relationship. "So we being many are one body in Christ, and every one members of one another,-having gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us."

Finally, as to the condition of soul needed that we may fulfil this responsibility, it has, in general, already been necessarily referred to-devotedness to God; and we can well conclude that where this is lacking, this open meeting will be the first to languish and die out, or rather it would be the meeting that would never be attempted. Worldliness, anxious care, covetousness, the wandering heart, formality, the lack of earnest prayer and joyful communion with the Lord, unfit us for the Master's use. But let us seek grace that it may not be so with us; and our consideration of. this subject, and confession of our real condition as so revealed by our incapacity, may lead to exercises far and wide, that will work deliverance. Is it not our shame that we should continue babes, and unable to use our gifts and our privileges? And this leads to many considerations as to our dependence on one another, and the great need there is that we should care for one another, and pray much for one another, as also for ourselves. What an interest we have in one another, that every one in the assembly and every family connected with us should have the blessing of God, and that hindrances should be removed. All this calls for diligence, vigilance, fasting, and prayer-a vigorous and healthful condition, instead of a slothful one, which would go with joy in the Lord, and increasing knowledge of God, while with it would be the Merari bitterness that belongs to those who care for the assembly, the house of God. For if our afflictions abound, the consolations of Christ abound also. There would then be more of the "sorrowing yet always rejoicing." But we are far from these things; yet, it we care about it and confess our need with prayer, we know well that the Lord will not fail to hear, and restore and bless through whatever rebukes and chastenings.

What habitual waiting upon God must be wrought in us, if we are to be found ready for special occasions; and if habitually thus, how easy, how simple a thing it is to receive from the Lord the word for the present need. So that all would know and rejoice that the present need was met by the Word in divine wisdom and grace.

How good then is our God, that if He calls upon us to fulfil our responsibilities and to use our gifts, it demands of us exercises that are pure blessing for us, and for His glory; for what is for His glory is for our blessing, which shows the glory and excellence of His character.

We should not be discouraged as to a meeting because we may at times weary one another. If there is habitual failure, there should be grace to admonish, and the Lord will give power to the admonition if from a patient and loving heart that has sought Him in prayer and faith.

May the Lord give us help, in His mercy, and lead us to count upon grace to enable us to do His will. May we bow down before the Lord about this in all the assemblies, and may we be ready to judge and let go everything that would unfit us to fill our place in the assembly; for we must either help or hinder; and how serious a consideration is this for all who love the Lord.
Shall we be dismayed by the smallness of our meetings? No doubt many can bear witness that at very small meetings, (when but two or three or a few more were present, or perhaps a rainy night, or wearied in body, or perhaps saddened by the absence of some) how the word by some brother was used for blessing, and they were made to feel how tenderly the Lord cared for them in their need, because they trusted Him.

May our hearts be alive to our need, and count upon the Lord to bless us. "He bringeth low and lifteth up." E. S. L.

  Author: E. S. L.         Publication: Volume HAF19

The Priesthood Of Believers.

"Ye also, as living stones, are built up a spiritual house, a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ" (1 Pet. 2:5).

" By Him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is. the fruit of our lips, giving thanks to His name" (Heb 13:15).

One of the most precious truths recovered to us in these last days is, as it seems to me, the priesthood of all believers; a truth which alas! seems practically unknown amongst the mass of Christians around us. And while I trust not a single saint could be found among those gathered to the name of Christ, ready to give up that truth-and God be thanked for this-yet is it not slipping from us, or are we not slipping from it, viewing the matter from a practical standpoint? I believe it is so, and for this reason I write to my beloved brethren on the subject.

There were certain central truths recovered to God's people by the Reformation ; there were others, likewise central, recovered to the Church about sixty years ago; and, as I view it, the priesthood of all believers is one of these latter. This truth, in company with that of the oneness of the body of Christ, and other truths which might be mentioned, would stand, as it were, for the mass of precious truth given afresh to us; and if we are practically, even if not theoretically, resigning it, how serious a sign it becomes; for truth is one, and it is doubtful if a single truth only is ever given up:certainly, one scripture-doctrine which has lost its preciousness for the soul, or amongst a body of believers, is a sure indication of other doctrines being in danger for the individual or the company.

And, beloved brethren, I ask in all earnestness, can there be a question about the freshness and power of the wondrous truth of our common priesthood in its broadest meaning, privileges and responsibilities, having been lost amongst us? A visit to almost any meeting anywhere, or better still, a month's sojourn in any meeting you choose, will, I think, justify but one answer to the question. If the meeting is small, there may be say two or three brethren out of half a dozen, who are ever heard; if the meeting be larger, perhaps out of a dozen or more brethren, three or four may be heard from time to time. I believe the average would not be above what I have indicated. Can there be any doubt about the story this thermometer tells?-that there is a drifting away from maintaining our priesthood, and toward clerisy? Do not misunderstand me as saying that we are only priests when we give audible expression in praise or prayer or reading of Scripture or the like, in and for the assembly; I would convey no such meaning. We may be truly exercising our functions as such in silence as truly as in speech. The sister's place of silence in the assembly surely does not, therefore, rob her in any way of the priest's place. All this I fully recognize; and I trust it would be as far from my thought as that of any one to make little of the praise, thanksgiving and worship which may, and surely does, go up to God in silence. But, owning all this, still the fact that it falls to a certain few brethren in almost every meeting to be the vehicle of expression for the assembly, instead of each brother realizing that he has responsibilities of this character in connection with his priesthood ("the fruit of the lips") can, I believe, admit of but one interpretation,-that there is in fact a great lack and a dangerous tendency amongst us along this line. I appeal to my dear brethren if this is not so?-I write not to criticize, but to appeal. Where are we, brethren? A large part of us settled down to let brother A and B and C offer praise, lead in prayer, give thanks at the table, or give a word from Scripture, without a thought as to the responsibilities we are shirking on the one hand, or the privileges we are forfeiting on the other?

Let us look a little more closely at the prevailing conditions in connection with our subject:-

1. Are we not confronted with unmistakable evidence that many of the special important truths,
long since recovered to us, are not laid hold of as generally and firmly by the saints gathering to the Lord's name, as they once were?

2. And is it not so that there is a smaller measure of apprehension amongst us of the happifying and soul-uplifting truth of the universal priesthood of believers, than was to be found when the doctrine was first recovered, or even a few years back?

3.And thus it surely follows that God the Father and Christ the Lord are robbed of praise. When our souls are robbed, especially of the practical enjoyment of a truth bearing directly on praise and i worship, God is necessarily robbed of His portion from us.

4. Again, if some brethren hold back and fail in their priestly privileges and responsibilities in the assembly, does it not, of necessity, force others forward?-each being unnatural, (unnatural spiritually, I mean) and one as unnatural as the other?-neither according to the Spirit of God. I believe I but speak the experience of many when I say that brethren often feel burdened and constrained on account of this very thing-an undue sense of responsibility in connection with being a voice in and for the assembly.

5. This condition must inevitably lead to clericalism in principle, even though we may be unconscious of it. What is clericalism but an exaggeration of this-all the priests abrogating their office and electing one to fill it for them? And if half, or two-thirds, or three-fourths of the brethren regularly by silence consent to a few taking all the active parts in the assembly meetings, yea, by their silence, forcing them to do so, how much short (in principle, and the soul-condition which it bespeaks,) is it of electing them to fill their offices for them? Here we have then, surely, the root of clerisy. And as to a corresponding clerical position, can it be wondered that some naturally, and perhaps unconsciously, drift into it? Others perhaps against their will, as already suggested, are almost forced into it; while others again, alas! may rather covet such place and find a ready opportunity to assume it.

O brethren, "suffer the word of exhortation." If the word of God is our food; if Christian doctrines, liberating and giving wings to the soul, are more and more apprehended, if nearness to God is enjoyed in our hearts, if the Sanctuary is our abiding place,-can we assemble together and not by audible expression reflect these conditions of soul and share with each other the Christ, and the things of Christ we are enjoying? " Fellowship with us"-Christian fellowship (and what is sweeter) is based upon:'' Truly our fellowship is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ" (i Jno. 1:3).

May the Lord revive His truth and grace among His people. Is it not a real spiritual revival that is needed, that we lay hold afresh of this precious doctrine and that it may lay hold of many who, it would seem, have never practically apprehended it?

Before closing, I advert to one reason often given by brethren as to their slowness, and that is that they have no gift for anything in public. Let it be remembered that gift is a different line of things entirely, it being from Christ to the Church; whereas priestly functions, which we have been considering, are from the Church to Christ. Gift, properly so-called, therefore, is not in question. It is not a matter of edifying the saints, but of offering praise to the Lord Jesus Christ; and while there will always be differences as to the extent of liberty that brethren feel in giving audible expression of any kind in the assembly, yet it is not conceivable that anyone can be growing in the grace and knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ, realizing in his soul his happy place and privilege as priest, and not have somewhat to offer – yes, and to offer audibly. The vessel filled to overflowing must certainly overflow. It may be in a stammering way, and it may be only in Paul's five words; – how much is said, is not the point. Let the heart go out without constraint and without any thought as to eloquence, or time occupied, or any such considerations, which would only hinder the natural and simple overflow of the heart's praise. F. G. P.

  Author: F. G. P.         Publication: Volume HAF19

The Way To The House.

Ps. 84:

"A PSALM FOR THE SONS OF KORAH. "

Though we are not given the name of the penman of this exquisite psalm, we are permitted to know for whose special use it was penned; for while there is no reason to question the genuineness of the headings of psalms in general, this psalm bears intrinsic evidence that its heading is correct; thus from whom would verse 10 (where the sons of Koran declare that they would rather be doorkeepers in the house of their God, than dwell in the tents of wickedness) so appropriately come, as from those to whom their office of being doorkeepers had been specially assigned? (i Chron. 9:19.)

Let us for a moment recall the facts. At the rebellion of Korah, Dathan and Abiram, we read that the wives and sons and little children of the two latter (who were Reubenites and who therefore did not accompany Korah, who was a Levite, to the door of the tabernacle), came out and stood with Dathan and Abiram at the door of their tents (Num. 16:27) and the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up, and their households, and all the men that appertained unto Korah, and all their goods (ver. 32). Thus Dathan's and Abiram's households were swallowed up, but only the men of Korah's family perished; for the children of Korah had neither accompanied their father to the door of the tabernacle, where he perished by fire (vers. 19, 35), nor came out to their tent-doors as the children of Dathan and Abiram did, and were in consequence swallowed up; so that we read that "the children of Korah died not" (Num. 26:ii). But where sin abounded grace did over abound. At the door of the tabernacle Korah and his two hundred and fifty companions met their doom by fire; the guardianship of the door of the tabernacle should be henceforth his children's special charge. And a delight some task they found it. There was no irksomeness in their duties. They would rather be doorkeepers in the house of their God than dwell, as Dathan and Abiram had done, in the tents of wickedness.

And, objects of grace themselves, out of full hearts they sing their song, exalting at 'once their service, and the beauty and attractiveness of the courts to which that service attached. "How amiable are Thy tabernacles, O Lord of hosts," they cry, and go on to express the fainting longing of their hearts for those courts, where even the worthless sparrow and vagrant swallow could find a home,-fit types of Israel who in their worthlessness had wandered far.

But what of those whose weary wanderings were over, whose feet were no longer "in the ways," but who were at rest within the courts ? " Blessed," cry the sons of Korah, "blessed are they that dwell in Thy house; they will be still praising Thee." There remained a rest for the people of God. They had proved Jehovah in the way, amid all its trials and difficulties and tears; but the trials were now over, the difficulties but a memory, and the tears forever dried. And if amidst its sorrows, they had praised Him on the way, they would praise Jehovah still. At rest in Jehovah's courts, they would still be praising Him.

But if they were blessed who, all their troubles over, were safely housed, blessed too were those who were yet on their way to Jehovah's courts. They, passing as Israel will yet have to pass, through the valley of Baca,-the vale of tears-make it a well; they find a source of blessing down here in their very tears; for the well speaks to us of refreshment from below:nor was this all, as that little word "also" beautifully shows; blessing should also accompany them from on high, "for the rain also"-that comes down from above-"covereth it with blessings" (R. V.). Thus earthly refreshment and heavenly blessing were alike theirs.

But were these blessings unconditional? Would Israel unconditionally rise superior to the trials of the way to Jehovah's house ? Conditions there were, and these the sons of Korah proceed to lay down. First in order for Israel in the latter day to find earthly and heavenly blessing in their trials, their strength must be in Jehovah. Secondly, their heart must be in the way to Jehovah's courts, and the way in their hearts-"in whose heart are the ways." But where-ever there was one whose soul longed, yea, even fainted for the courts of Jehovah, whose heart and flesh cried out for the living God, that one should go from strength to strength-the very trials of such should energize their souls, and every one should finally appear before God in Zion.

Now, "no prophecy of Scripture is of private (or special) interpretation " (2 Pet. 1:20):1:e., we cannot take a scripture and bind it down simply and solely to one sole and only interpretation, however true that interpretation may be. True, this psalm was written primarily for the sons of Korah, and it deals primarily with Israel and their latter-day trials and blessings. But were we to bind the interpretation down exclusively to their primary meaning we should rob our souls of infinite blessing in reading the Psalms. How many an one who knows nothing of dispensational truth has derived the deepest comfort from the Psalms ! As Mr. Spurgeon once remarked, there is no depth of sorrow into which we can descend, nor height of joy to which we can rise, but we find that David has been there before us! Thus, that which primarily applied to him is fraught with richest blessing for ourselves. Truly the Bible is not like a book of man's production, which has a " private interpretation"-an explanation, that is, alone applicable to it; but, being God's work, the meaning of any particular passage cannot be confined to that interpretation which lies primarily and obviously on its face. Hence this psalm of the sons of Korah has its application to ourselves. We, like Israel, who in the latter day will have to win their way through trial and difficulty to Jehovah's house on earth, have ours to win towards the Father's house on high; and trials and tears lie in our path. The way to the throne has ever lain through the pit, whether in Joseph's case, the great Anti-Type's, or our own. But if God is our strength, and the ways to the Father's house are in our hearts, those tears which God puts in His bottle, those sorrows which He notes in His book, shall work us present and eternal blessing. Oh, tried and tested fellow-believer, you are in God's school, where " tribulation worketh patience, and patience experience, and experience hope; and hope maketh not ashamed, because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts, by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us." Therefore you may glory in tribulation also; and, Jehovah being your strength, in all these things you are more than conquerors; for earthly victors conquer when their difficulties are overcome:you conquer in them; your tears become a well, and rain from heaven covers you with blessings; for, Achsah-like, the upper and the nether springs are yours (Josh. 15:16). And hence it is that you shall go from strength to strength-"there was not one feeble person among their tribes" (Ps. 105:37); but "every one appeareth before God in Zion." " He never promised me, "said an aged widow in Devonshire to the writer, who had but three shillings a week to live on, – " He never promised me a smooth passage, but He has promised me a safe landing."

Yea, His sheep shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of His hand. Herein is the "final perseverance," not of the sheep, but of the Shepherd. "I am the Good Shepherd," He says. If He lost but one of His sheep He would lose His reputation also. He will never do this; He leadeth them in the paths of righteousness for His Name's sake-that name of Good Shepherd. Blessed Saviour, who having loved His own that were in the world, loved them unto the end.

" O Lord of hosts, blessed is the man that trusteth in Thee." JOHN FORT.

  Author: J. Fort         Publication: Volume HAF19

The Ministration Of Carnal Things.*

*From Numerical Bible, on 2 Cor. 8:and 9:*

We have now come to a form of ministry winch it is evident the apostle makes ranch of, and which, perhaps, is in little danger of being thought little of at any time. As we see in the body of Christ itself, the fitting together of the whole by that which every part supplieth,-the need of one being met by the ability that is in another,-so in the world itself, not in its evil shape, but as God has ordained things amongst men, we see the same fitting together, the dependence of one upon another, the need intended, as is evident, to draw out the heart in men towards one another, and to make conscious the weakness which is after all a weakness manifest in all in different ways and measures. Here is, I suppose, what makes the suitability also of this subject forming a fifth division of the epistle, the number 5 speaking, as has often been said, of the weak with the strong, primarily of the creature with God, but which may thus have, and surely has, its application in a lower sphere. The ministry of power of whatever kind to weakness, is essentially that all through here; and, as we have seen already in the sermon on the mount, the Lord makes even almsgiving an example of what is simply righteousness on the part of those who realize their own need of the ministry which thus goes out to others.

All this is a matter in which, alas, the heart is so often separated from the band, and the easy liberality of the rich may so assume an appearance of goodness beyond that which can really be sustained before God, that we have need of care in handling it. The Lord has shown us how the largeness of the gift is in no wise the test of what is good in God's sight, and how the two mites of a poor widow, making one farthing, can be more to Him than all the treasures piled up by the wealthy. In fact, those of whom the apostle speaks here were manifesting in their deep poverty the
riches of their free-hearted liberality. This is what makes liberality noteworthy. It is not so much what is given as what remains to the giver. What the apostle valued, as there is no possibility of questioning, was not the largeness of the gift, but the heart displayed in it. The collection of which he is speaking here was for the poor Jews at Jerusalem, a witness of the appreciation on the part of the Gentiles of the blessing which God had ministered to them through the Jews. It was righteousness on their part to own this ; and the spiritual blessing which they had received was far beyond any tiling that could be compensated pecuniarily, however much it might he acknowledged. It was the manner of the giving here which rejoiced the heart of the apostle. The saints did not give to release themselves, as it were, from a certain obligation to the Lord, but they had given themselves first to Him, and this made it a simple matter to give all the rest. Thus the material ministry became spiritual; and this is why the apostle rejoiced in it. It was an evidence of love and devotedness, and thus he could exhort the Corinthians to follow the example which the assemblies of Macedonia had set them; aud, as they were abounding now in all Christian grace, they would surely abound in this grace too among the rest.

He sets before them the transcendent example of One who was rich, and yet for our sakes became poor to enrich us through His poverty. "What an example to keep all other giving in its place, to make it seem as little as it really is, aud yet at the same time to make it more acceptable to God by the consciousness of its littleness! The Corinthians had, in fact, manifested their readiness for that of which he was speaking a year before. He had only to urge them, therefore, to carry out what had been in their thoughts so long already, remembering that, as to individual giving, God did not expect from a man what he had not, aud He did not mean to ease some by putting burdens upon others. The beautiful example of the manna is that which he sets before them here, where-in a ministry which was from heaven itself and in which men had only to gather that which God had bestowed,- yet "he who gathered much had nothing over, and he who gathered little had no lack." That was God's thought and desire for them all, but using human instrumentality to accomplish it, and thus binding the hearts of His people to each other, and drawing forth the love, of which the gift, if it were anything, was but the manifestation.

The apostle goes on to speak of his care that in the ministration of the "carnal things," as he calls them (which prove themselves so much a temptation to the flesh, and as to which the jealous eyes of enemies would so surely be upon him) there should not be the slightest opportunity given for even a question as to his conduct. It was not enough for him here that God would know all, so that he might leave it to Him to justify him in His own time and way. Where there were means that could be taken to prevent even suspicion he would take them, which even his not taking might be in itself a cause of suspicion. It is a principle of importance that we are called to recognize in a man whose faith in God was so preeminent, that he would not act simply upon this, in a matter of this kind. He would not say here, as in another relation he does say, that with him it was a very small matter to be judged of any. He does not build upon his apostleship, or the undoubted blessing that God had given to his labor, in such a way as to think himself beyond the need of justifying himself by the use of such precautions as would be thought needful in the case of another man. It would rather seem as if the sense of the place he filled in this way only made more imperative the necessity to "provide for honest things, not only in the sight of the Lord, but also in the sight of men." He did not, as many lesser men might do, and have done, stand upon the dignity of his office and disdain the thought of any account to be rendered to those before whom his life had so evidently spoken, tested as he had been by innumerable trials. No, he "magnified his office" in a wholly different way. Thus for this cause also he could be glad of the zeal of others which could lead them to accept readily association with him in this matter of ministry of even "carnal things." And he thinks it right that not only should these be men of the highest character, but also the choice of the assemblies themselves. Of these he can speak in terms of fullest assurance. "They are the messengers of the assemblies," he says, "and the glory of Christ." He would not allow it to be thought that he had covered any defects in the administration either with the cloak of his apostleship, or of his personal faith.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF19